Business Standard

With Softbank rally, Son adds $12 bn to fortune

- BLOOMBERG

Softbank Group founder Masayoshi Son has enjoyed a $12 billion renaissanc­e the past three months, easing the pressure on his intricatel­y engineered personal finances.

With Softbank Group’s shares surging to their highest price in two decades on Thursday, Son’s net worth hit $20 billion, more than doubling from

$8.4 billion in March, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es

Index. It is the first time the 62year-old’s fortune has topped $20 billion since January 2013, when the ranking first started tracking his wealth.

The calculatio­n excludes about $13.3 billion of his Softbank Group shares pledged as collateral, representi­ng some 40 per cent of his stake, according to regulatory filings. A further 26 per cent of his holding is lent out for a fee to different entities, mostly brokerages, likely to add liquidity to the market. Those shares are included in Son’s net worth calculatio­n because he retains control over them.

“For those lending shares, it’s about creating incrementa­l revenue,” said Andrew Dyson, CEO of the Internatio­nal Securities Lending Associatio­n. He noted such transactio­ns ease the execution of trades, while enabling hedging and shorting strategies. “Lending out securities generates hundreds of millions of dollars in fees a quarter.”

Softbank shares have surged 133 per cent from a low in March, taking the Tokyobased company’s market value to $123 billion. While its Vision Fund lost almost $18 billion in the latest fiscal year as it wrote down the value of investment­s in Wework, Uber Technologi­es and others, record equity buybacks and a series of wins have helped the stock recover. Softbank sold part of its stake in T-mobile last month, and an online home-insurance provider that it’s backing more than doubled on its US debut in July.

 ??  ?? The calculatio­n excludes $13.3 billion of his Softbank Group shares pledged as collateral, representi­ng some 40% of his stake
The calculatio­n excludes $13.3 billion of his Softbank Group shares pledged as collateral, representi­ng some 40% of his stake

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