The Palm Beach Post

Inside Masayoshi Son’s deal-making onslaught

Huge, unpreceden­ted fund for tech startups has backers, skeptics.

- By Peter Elstrom, Pavel Alpeyev and Lulu Yilun Chen Bloomberg

Early last year, Cheng Wei, founder and chief executive of the Chinese ride-hailing juggernaut Didi Chuxing, tried to resist taking money from legendary investor Masayoshi Son.

Cheng told the SoftBank Group chief he didn’t need the cash because his company had already raised $10 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. Fine, Son said, then suggested he might direct his support to one of Didi’s rivals. Cheng relented and took the investment: $5 billion in the largest fundraisin­g round ever for a tech startup.

Son pulled a similar maneuver in November, publicly warning Uber Technologi­es that if he didn’t get the deal he wanted, his backing would go to archrival Lyft. Uber also took the money in a $9 billion investment unveiled last month.

Masayoshi Son has been an unstoppabl­e force in the technology world over the last year. As he lined up a roster of big backers — Saudi Arabia’s crown prince and Apple’s Tim Cook among them — for SoftBank’s planned $100 billion Vision Fund, Son took stakes in scores of businesses engaged in a dizzying array of activities: ride-hailing, chipmaking, office sharing, satellite building, robot-making, even indoor kale farming.

Son’s idiosyncra­tic deal-making has confounded admirers and detractors for years. And the latest frenzy has been no exception. In deal after deal, according to people involved, Son pressed to meet founders face to face, encouraged them to take more money than they wanted and wielded his outsized checkbook as a weapon. Along the way, he rattled rivals with his growing influence and changed the game of startup investing — for better or worse.

“There really isn’t a precedent for this,” says Steven Kaplan, a professor at University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business who co-founded its entreprene­urship program. “The jury is still out on whether it will work.”

Son’s investment strategy defies easy categoriza­tion. He portrays himself as a true believer in the informatio­n revolution, a proponent of the so-called singularit­y — the notion that one day computers will mesh with human brains and bodies. But Son has skeptics aplenty. They wonder how ride-hailing fits with money management. Or what satellites have to do with indoor farming.

Son, 60, has made hundreds of investment­s since he founded SoftBank in 1981 and during the dot-com bubble was briefly the world’s richest man. But the vast majority of those deals failed, and Son’s reputation rests almost solely on one transactio­n: an investment in Alibaba Group Holding that started with $20 million in 2000.

SoftBank’s stake is now worth about $129 billion, one of the most lucrative venture investment­s of all time. But many people think that was a fluke. Son got lucky one time. Can he do it again?

Son declined to comment for this story. A SoftBank spokesman said his track record of success goes well beyond Alibaba and includes investment­s in Sprint, Yahoo and Supercell, the developer of games like Clash Royale.

$1 billion a minute

The latest deal-making spree began in September 2016. Mohammed bin Salman, deputy crown prince of Saudi Arabia at the time, flew to Tokyo as his coun-

try was looking for ways to diversify beyond oil. He met with Son, who pitched the idea of setting up the largest investment fund in history to finance technology startups. In less than an hour, bin Salman agreed to become the cornerston­e investor. “Forty-five minutes, $45 billion,” Son said on “The David Rubenstein Show” in September. “One billion dollars per minute.”

Son didn’t wait for the money to come in before starting to cut deals. He made about 100 investment­s last year with a total value of $36 billion, according to research firm Preqin. That’s more in dollar terms than Silicon Valley’s top two heavyweigh­ts, Sequoia Capital and Silver Lake, combined.

More surprising given the numbers is that SoftBank is largely a one-man show when it comes to deals, despite its ranks of bankers from Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley. Lieutenant­s pitch Son ideas, but he makes the final decisions — and he generates plenty of his own. Tellingly, he is the only so-called key man in the Vision Fund, while most investment funds have several people with the influentia­l designatio­n. (Limited partners have the option to withdraw from a fund if any “key men” leave.)

“It’s 100 percent Masa,” says one CEO who agreed to sell Son a stake in his company. “OK, 99.9 percent Masa.”

Son typically brings in his bankers when there’s a complex deal structure, like in the Uber deal. In that case, SoftBank bought most of its shares through a tender offer with tricky legal aspects because of a nasty board dispute and the many investors involved.

The SoftBank spokesman said decisions are “made by the organizati­on after due diligence and process.”

Son has an unusually personal approach. He often invites founders to Tokyo to talk face to face, conversing in English. He’ll typically begin with a formal meeting in one of his conference rooms on SoftBank’s 26th floor. Then Son, his guest and staff will move to the private dining area on the same floor, according to people who have attended the meetings. Visitors can wander in his garden or relax on traditiona­l tatami mats. Son’s personal chef prepares Japanese specialtie­s. Big-screen TVs often play SoftBank Hawks baseball games. There’s little small talk though.

“He asks a lot of questions,” says Greg Wyler, the CEO of satellite provider OneWeb, which received a $1 billion SoftBank investment in December 2016. “If you like thinking really hard and really fast and you like thinking through the art of the possible, it’s a wonderfull­y motivating experience.”

Son’s staff does due diligence before he meets with startup founders. So he has a good sense of whether he wants to invest before the meeting. His questions are usually focused on prodding founders to think more broadly about opportunit­ies.

Eugene Izhikevich was invited to Tokyo in May. A prominent Russian neuroscien­tist who lives in San Diego, he runs a startup that builds brains for robots. Izhikevich pitched Son on investing “tens of millions” so his company could develop robots that would find widespread use in a decade or two. “He interrupte­d me in the middle of my presentati­on and said, ‘I got it,’” Izhikevich says. “How much do you need to achieve your vision?”

Strong expectatio­ns

The Russian realized Son wanted to give him more money than he was requesting — on the condition that Izhikevich accelerate his work. Son didn’t want to wait 10 or 20 years. He wanted a full range of robots in three to five years. “Robots everywhere, that’s the vision we share,” Izhikevich says. “What drives me crazy is how slow things are. In Masa, I found my match.”

In July, SoftBank announced a $114 million investment in Izhikevich’s Brain Corp. The Russian appreciate­s the money, but admits he feels the pressure of living up to Son’s expectatio­ns.

Son is largely hands-off after cutting a check, though he stays in touch with founders by phone and email. He sits on the boards of a few companies, including Sprint, Alibaba and ARM Holdings, the chipmaker he acquired in 2016 for $32 billion in the biggest deal of his career.

While some question the wisdom of giving entreprene­urs more cash than they’re looking for, there’s another way to look at Son’s 2017 blitzkrieg. He’s gotten SoftBank big stakes in more than a dozen of the world’s most prominent startups, including the two most valuable (Uber and Didi). In the process, he’s shown he can help entreprene­urs chase ambitious, expensive dreams with a single check. “For all of the founders I work with, he is now the first name on their list,” says Mark Tluszcz, who co-founded the venture firm Mangrove Capital Partners.

Confoundin­g skeptics

Son has faced skeptics his entire life. He grew up on the southern Japanese island of Kyushu, bullied as a child because of his Korean ancestry. His father more than made up for the abuse, doting on his son and praising him as a genius for his business acumen. Son left Japan at 16 to study in the U.S. and launched his career as an entreprene­ur while at the University of California at Berkeley. He brought “Space Invaders” game machines from Japan to the U.S. and invented an electronic translator that he sold for about $1 million.

Son likes to talk about how he proved doubters wrong after returning to Japan to build his empire. He made early investment­s in Yahoo and Yahoo Japan, as well as Alibaba. He took over Vodafone’s Japanese wireless operation when everyone thought the business was hopeless, and by persuading Steve Jobs to give him exclusive rights to the first iPhone in Japan, turned it into a fierce competitor.

He stumbled plenty, too. During the dot-com boom, Son was one of the most enthusiast­ic investors — backing more than 800 startups to create what he called a “netbatsu,” the digital-age equivalent of Japan’s zaibatsu conglomera­tes. But with the crash, almost all those companies failed. Son had the distinctio­n of losing more money than anyone else ever had: $70 billion.

Son doesn’t use the same term these days, but what he’s assembling resembles his old netbatsu. He describes the people at the startups he’s backing as “comrades” and how they’re part of the broader SoftBank Group. He talks about opportunit­ies for SoftBank-backed companies to collaborat­e — even when all they have in common is his money.

Chris Lane, an analyst with Sanford Bernstein, says about eight in 10 investors he talks with are skeptical of Son. They see him as a solid telecom operator who is taking enormous risks with his investment­s and has demonstrat­ed no special skill in technology investment. Lane sees clear evidence of that disbelief: SoftBank’s stock in Alibaba and other assets are worth more than 19 trillion yen after subtractin­g all its debt, but SoftBank’s market cap is only 9.8 trillion yen. It’s like your neighbor having a suitcase stuffed with $1 million in cash, but you’ll only pay him $500,000 for it because you think he’ll lose the rest on the way to your house. Critics not only don’t believe Son can pick the next Alibaba; they’re convinced he’s going to squander what he already has.

“If you think of this as a telco making unrelated investment­s and likely to lose money, then maybe the discount is right,” Lane says. “If you think this is a sophistica­ted technology investment firm with a strong track record, then this is an unbelievab­le opportunit­y.”

Lane initiated coverage of SoftBank in October with a buy rating because he’s a believer — he sees Son as the Warren Buffett of the tech industry. But since then, the discount from Son’s assets to his market value has widened from 41 percent to almost 50 percent.

Son has talked about the discount regularly on investor calls, sounding frustrated at times and elated at others. In May, he compared SoftBank to the goose that lays golden eggs, arguing his company doesn’t get credit for its eggs, much less the goose itself. “The goose has more value than the golden eggs. I don’t know how you don’t think this,” he said, then later added, “if you ask me, it’s better to be undervalue­d because it leaves room for growth.”

 ?? AKIO KON / BLOOMBERG 2017 ?? Billionair­e Masayoshi Son, chairman and CEO of SoftBank Group Corp., took stakes in scores of businesses in the technology world over the past year.
AKIO KON / BLOOMBERG 2017 Billionair­e Masayoshi Son, chairman and CEO of SoftBank Group Corp., took stakes in scores of businesses in the technology world over the past year.
 ?? KIYOSHI OTA / BLOOMBERG 2017 ?? Masayoshi Son invests in all things tech. A Boston Dynamics “Spot” robot is displayed at SoftBank Robot World 2017 in Tokyo in November.
KIYOSHI OTA / BLOOMBERG 2017 Masayoshi Son invests in all things tech. A Boston Dynamics “Spot” robot is displayed at SoftBank Robot World 2017 in Tokyo in November.
 ??  ?? Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman met with Son.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman met with Son.

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