Bangkok Post

SoftBank starting to look a lot like private equity firm

- PAVEL ALPEYEV BLOOMBERG

TOKYO: SoftBank Group Corp’s metamorpho­sis into an investment management company is becoming clearer.

The Japanese telecommun­ications provider and technology investor said operating profit rose 49% to 715 billion yen ($6.4 billion) in the three months ended June. That was fueled mainly by investment gains, including a 245 billion yen boost from its Vision Fund and 161 billion yen from the sale of subsidiary ARM’s Chinese unit. Revenue was 2.27 trillion yen.

Underscori­ng chief executive Masayoshi Son’s change in focus, SoftBank is on track to separate its mobile operations, with the planned initial public offering of its domestic wireless business and sale of US unit Sprint Corp to T-Mobile US Inc.

The Vision Fund, which Son formed last year with almost $100 billion from big backers, including Saudi Arabia and Apple Inc, will hold investment­s in the world’s most influentia­l technology companies.

Son is betting on a future of robotics, artificial intelligen­ce and disruption in older industries.

“Son today talked about his strategy of investing into companies that will profit from the impact of AI — that will probably happen five to 10 years from now, and that’s when it will be reflected in SoftBank’s share price,” said Hideki Yasuda, an analyst at Ace Research Institute. “But there are more immediate investment­s that are already showing results, and that’s something investors have to start taking into account.”

The Vision Fund portfolio ranges from ride-hailing companies, digital payments and satellites to semiconduc­tors, agricultur­e and cancer detection.

The fund’s contributi­on in the first quarter was mainly due to a valuation gain from the planned sale of Flipkart Online Services Pvt, the leading Indian e-commerce player, to Walmart Inc and increase in fair value of WeWork Companies Inc.

“The Vision Fund will continue to deliver results every year and increase its value,” Son said at a briefing. “We are creating a group of the world’s most advanced unicorn companies.”

As Son ramps up his investment­s, one clue to where he’s looking to deploy the Vision Fund’s cash is in his earnings briefings. His presentati­ons over the past 12 years show how his thinking has evolved, and that his biggest obsession right now is over artificial intelligen­ce.

“It may look like there is no rhyme or reason and I’m just making unrelated investment­s,” Son said. “But there is a unifying reason. It’s AI. AI is coming like a Big Bang. Every industry will be redefined.”

The proposed $26.5 billion takeover of Sprint by T-Mobile would combine the No. 3 and No. 4 wireless providers in the US. The two carriers have been pitching their deal as a combinatio­n of underdogs trying to better compete against industry giants AT&T Inc and Verizon Communicat­ions Inc.

SoftBank is interviewi­ng banks to arrange the IPO of its domestic wireless business and plans to select several lead underwrite­rs as early as August, people with knowledge of the matter have said.

Foreign and local investment banks have been making formal pitches to SoftBank over the past few weeks, according to the people. “The company aims for the mobile unit to begin trading in Tokyo in October and the offering could raise more than two trillion yen.’’

Revenue from domestic telecom operations, which include wireless, broadband and fixed-line services, rose 4.6% to 880.5 billion yen in the quarter. SoftBank had 33.6 million mobile subscriber­s, an increase of 434,000 from the previous quarter.

Earnings from the operations may come under pressure as billionair­e Hiroshi Mikitani’s Rakuten Inc plans to become the country’s fourth major mobile-phone operator.

Son, whose acquisitio­n of Vodafone’s Japan business in 2006 was the industry’s biggest shake-up in recent history, has said he welcomes the competitio­n.

“We have to go beyond being just a carrier in a maturing industry,” he said. “That’s why we are planning to rapidly increase collaborat­ion with the Vision Fund.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? ‘AI is coming like a Big Bang. Every industry will be redefined,’ Masayoshi Son, chairman and CEO of SoftBank Group Corp, said during a news conference in Tokyo yesterday.
BLOOMBERG ‘AI is coming like a Big Bang. Every industry will be redefined,’ Masayoshi Son, chairman and CEO of SoftBank Group Corp, said during a news conference in Tokyo yesterday.

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