The Guardian (USA)

SoftBank value slumps as investors fear it may be the 'Nasdaq Whale'

- Simon Goodley

The value of the Japanese technology investor SoftBank slumped by about £7bn on Monday after shareholde­rs were spooked by reports that the company has been making huge bets on US technology firms listed on a US stock exchange.

Over the weekend, SoftBank, which is best known for investing in young technology businesses, was reported to be the so-called “Nasdaq Whale” whose massive punts were behind US technology stocks moving to record highs before slipping back at the end of last week.

By the middle of last week, the US equity market had rallied by about 55% since March. In particular, tech giants such as Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google have seen their share prices soar.

SoftBank’s moves in the market appear to have succeeded in the short term, with the company said to be sitting on trading gains of about $4bn (£3bn) after a series of colossal bets on equity derivative­s by the group’s founder, Masayoshi Son.

However, the change in strategy is viewed as high risk and appears to have scared investors, who fear that markets could switch and leave the company nursing painful losses.

About 30% of SoftBank shareholde­rs are retail investors who are still recovering from some of the investment company’s high-profile failures over the past year, having invested heavily in the likes of the office space provider WeWork, which it ended up rescuing last year, and the payments group Wirecard, which filed for insolvency in the summer amidst a £1.7bn alleged accounting fraud.

Softbank is believed to have bet $4bn on call options focused on individual US technology stocks.A call option is a financial derivative that gives the owner the right to buy a share at a pre-agreed price – but the trade can help drive up the value of the real stock market as the sellers of the options buy the underlying shares.

Shares in SoftBank closed down 7.2% on the Tokyo exchange. US stock markets were closed on Monday because of the Labor Day holiday. Before Monday’s drop, SoftBank’s shares had climbed by about a third this year.

Softbank declined to comment.

 ?? Photograph: Kim Kyung Hoon/ Reuters ?? SoftBank’s founder Masayoshi Son. Investors are still reeling from some of the firm’s high profile failures.
Photograph: Kim Kyung Hoon/ Reuters SoftBank’s founder Masayoshi Son. Investors are still reeling from some of the firm’s high profile failures.

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