The National - News

SOFTBANK PROFITS FROM VISION FUND INVESTMENT GAINS

▶ Japanese technology company says operating profit was ¥715 billion in the three months in the end of June

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SoftBank Group’s first-quarter profit climbed 49 per cent from a year earlier, thanks to investment gains.

The Japanese telecommun­ications provider and technology investor said operating profit was ¥715 billion (Dh23.5bn) in the three months ended June, boosted by a ¥245bn gain from its Vision Fund and a ¥161bn gain on the sale of subsidiary ARM’s Chinese unit. Revenue was ¥2.27 trillion, Bloomberg reported.

The results are overshadow­ed by the sale of Sprint to T-Mobile US and planned initial public offering of SoftBank’s domestic wireless business.

Founder Masayoshi Son has shifted his focus to the company’s long-term future and investment­s in overseas technology companies.

Last year, he formed the Vision Fund, raising almost $100bn from big backers including Saudi Arabia and Apple. Mr Son has said the fund represents the transforma­tion of SoftBank from a telecoms conglomera­te to a holdings group with investment­s in the world’s most influentia­l technology companies.

In June, The National reported Abu Dhabi’s strategic firm, Mubadala Investment Company, was partnering with SoftBank to launch a $400 million fund that will target investment in European tech companies.

The fund will be managed by the Abu Dhabi fund’s venture capital arm, Mubadala Ventures, with SoftBank participat­ing via its investment subsidiary SIMI US Holdings.

In October, Mubadala, which manages more than $200bn in assets, announced the launch of a venture capital arm to oversee its $15bn commitment to SoftBank’s Vision Fund, as well as two other funds.

The proposed $26.5bn takeover of Sprint by T-Mobile would combine the third and fourth-largest wireless providers in the US, according to Bloomberg.

The two carriers have been pitching their deal as a combinatio­n of underdogs trying to better compete against industry giants AT&T and Verizon Communicat­ions.

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.

The company aims for the mobile unit to begin trading in Tokyo in October and the offering could raise more than ¥2tn, they said.

Revenue from domestic telecom operations, which include wireless, broadband and fixed-line services, rose 4.6 per cent to ¥880.5bn in the quarter.

Profit was little changed. SoftBank had 33.6 million mobile subscriber­s, an increase of 434,000 from the previous quarter.

The Vision Fund contributi­on was mainly due to a valuation gain from the planned sale of Flipkart Online Services, the leading Indian e-commerce player, to Walmart and increase in fair value of WeWork Companies.

 ??  ?? Masayoshi Son, chairman of SoftBank, is focusing on the company’s long-term future and investment­s in overseas technology companies Bloomberg
Masayoshi Son, chairman of SoftBank, is focusing on the company’s long-term future and investment­s in overseas technology companies Bloomberg

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