Arab Times

Japan tech giant SoftBank posts $23 bn quarterly loss

Investment­s value sink

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TOKYO, Aug 8, (AP): Japanese technology company SoftBank Group posted a $23.4 billion loss in the April-June quarter as the value of its investment­s sank amid global worries about inflation and interest rates.

SoftBank Group Corp’s loss of 3.16 trillion yen was a reversal from its 762 billion yen profit in the same quarter a year earlier. Quarterly sales rose 6% to 1.57 trillion yen ($11.6 billion).

“I must humbly and honestly acknowledg­e that things are really bad,” a somber Chief Executive Masayoshi Son told reporters Monday. “I must face up to this.”

Losses for the last six months totaled about 5 trillion yen ($37 billion), and the latest red ink was the worst quarterly loss since the company’s founding, he said.

For the fiscal year that ended in March, Softbank racked up losses of 1.7 trillion yen ($13 billion), a reversal from the 4.9 trillion yen profit for the previous year. Annual sales grew 10.5% to 6.2 trillion yen ($46 billion).

Although Softbank’s portfolio is not directly exposed to the war in Ukraine, the company warned that global uncertaint­y as well as inflation and soaring energy costs would likely hurt its profitabil­ity.

Value

Much of the dip of the value in shares came from a drop in price of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, in which SoftBank is a major investor. The declining value of the yen also hurt Tokyo-based SoftBank’s bottom line because its borrowings must be repaid in yen.

How long the problems will persist is unclear, Son said, noting it could be months or even years because of global instabilit­y and inflation.

Softbank’s intended sale of British semiconduc­tor and software design company Arm to Nvidia failed earlier this year. SoftBank is now promising lucrative future growth at Arm, including an initial public offering, although a date has not been announced for that offering.

SoftBank acquired Arm in 2016. Arm is a leader in artificial intelligen­ce, IoT, cloud, the metaverse and autonomous driving. Its semiconduc­tor design is widely licensed and used in virtually all smartphone­s, the majority of tablets and digital TVs. Such technology is considered key for autonomous driving cars.

Though Arm remains a bit of a positive for SoftBank, Son said he was not going to gloss over the overwhelmi­ngly devastatin­g results for the latest quarter.

Lower share prices might appear to be an opportunit­y to buy at bargain basement prices, but Son promised SoftBank will firmly hold back on new investment­s, cut costs and jobs, and instead focus on the more than 470 companies it’s already invested in, mostly companies focused on artificial

intelligen­ce.

He declined to say how many jobs were being reduced. SoftBank also owns stakes in the SoftBank mobile carrier, Yahoo web services provider and vehicle-for-hire company Didi, which has suffered under a regulatory crackdown in China. SoftBank also has funds that include other global investors called Vision Funds.

Son stressed he still believes in the potential of the Vision Fund investment­s.

“We believe this is a source of future great wealth,” he said. “But we don’t really know for sure until it happens.”

He said some of the companies were exciting and may benefit humankind, but if dreams are pursued too recklessly, sometimes there is a risk of annihilati­on.

“And we must avoid annihilati­on at all costs,” said Son.

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