The National - News

SoftBank aims to offer staff up to $20bn in loans

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SoftBank is planning to lend as much as $20 billion (Dh73.5bn) to its employees, including chief executive Masayoshi Son, to buy stakes in its second venture capital fund following the success of an earlier $100bn fund to invest in tech start-ups, The Wall

Street Journal reported. The second Vision Fund aims to raise $ 108bn, SoftBank said last month, and it plans to commit $ 38bn of its own capital to the second fund. In addition to its employees, Apple, Goldman Sachs, Microsoft, Foxconn and the sovereign wealth fund of Kazakhstan are expected to invest in the tech fund.

Seven Japanese financial institutio­ns have also signed preliminar­y agreements to participat­e.

SoftBank founder Mr Son may account for half of the employee investment pool, according to the Journal.

Mr Son has a net worth of $16.9bn, making him Japan’s second-richest person, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

Executives at the telecom giant, the second-biggest in Japan, believe that lending employees money to participat­e in the fund will make them more accountabl­e as the investment­s of the fund can be cancelled if a manager leaves or is found to have engaged in a “reckless deal”, according to the Jour

nal. The newspaper reported it understood that the loans are likely to have an interest rate of about 5 per cent.

This month, SoftBank reported first-quarter profit that beat the highest analyst estimate with valuation gains from Vision Fund investment­s such as collaborat­ion platform Slack, which went public in June, hotel chain Oyo Rooms and food-delivery app DoorDash.

The gains were offset by a $1.8bn decline in the fair value of holdings including Uber, Bloomberg reported.

SoftBank also disclosed the Vision Fund held 81 investment­s worth about $66.3bn and the first fund had earned 62 per cent returns so far. About five or six companies from the fund will list by next March, Mr Son had said earlier.

SoftBank said the Vision Fund held 81 investment­s worth about $66.3bn and the first fund earned 62% returns so far

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