Kuwait Times

SoftBank back to black with $12bn profit after losses

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TOKYO: SoftBank Group yesterday reported a $12 billion quarterly net profit to June, recovering from eye-watering losses as tech stocks rally and the firm sheds assets to shore up its finances.

The results will be a relief for chief Masayoshi Son, who has faced an increasing drumbeat of criticism after recent record losses for the firm. Son transforme­d what began as a telecoms company into an investment and tech behemoth with stakes in some of Silicon Valley’s hottest start-ups through its $100 billion Vision Fund. But he has battled opposition to his strategy of pouring money into start-ups-including troubled office-sharing firm WeWork-which some analysts say are overvalued and lack clear profit models.

The 11.9 percent rise in net profit to 1.26 trillion yen ($12 billion) puts SoftBank back in the black after a turbulent financial year that saw its investment woes magnified by the coronaviru­s pandemic and plunges in global stock markets. Son has insisted that his strategy is sound, and that SoftBank’s portfolio is broad enough to weather the storm, but acknowledg­ed the challenges when the firm reported an eye-watering $8.9 billion annual net loss in May, hit by the WeWork debacle and stock crashes.

The results come after SoftBank launched an aggressive plan to sell up to $41 billion in assets to finance a stock buy-back, after Son said shares were

undervalue­d. The fundraisin­g was also intended to reduce the firm’s debts and increase cash reserves. Paired with the recent recovery in tech stock prices, the strategy appears to be paying off, analysts said.

“SoftBank has achieved a V-shape recovery,” said Tomoaki Kawasaki, an analyst at Iwai Cosmo Securities. Kawasaki told AFP that investor sentiment had been boosted by the firm’s decision to sell assets and buy back shares. “But we still need to carefully watch SoftBank’s performanc­e, which is heavily subject to stock markets,” he added. SoftBank shares closed down 2.45 percent to 6,361 yen shortly before the results were announced, up significan­tly from their March low of 2,687 yen.

The firm also reported 983 billion yen in investment gains for the quarter to June, including profit from its Vision Fund. But it warned that the pandemic continued to cause uncertaint­y, bolstering its investment­s in e-commerce and food delivery firms, but hammering those in the hotel and hospitalit­y sectors.

It said it would not offer a forecast “due to numerous uncertaint­ies affecting earnings.” Son has struggled to interest investors in a second round of the Vision Fund as he deals with the woes of some of his most high-profile investment­s, notably WeWork. —AFP

 ??  ?? TOKYO: A woman walks past a SoftBank mobile store in Tokyo yesterday. — AFP
TOKYO: A woman walks past a SoftBank mobile store in Tokyo yesterday. — AFP

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