Bangkok Post

SoftBank pays price for tech bets with hefty loss

- HIROSHI HIYAMA

Japanese investment giant SoftBank Group Corp yesterday logged a record annual net loss after a bruising year that saw its assets hit by a US tech-share rout and a regulatory crackdown in China.

SoftBank’s big stakes in global tech giants and volatile new ventures have made for unpredicta­ble earnings, and the latest tumble comes with tech shares tanking as the United States hikes interest rates to tackle inflation.

The company reported a loss of 1.71 trillion yen ($13.2 billion) in the year to March 2022 — a vertiginou­s plunge from its nearly five trillion yen net profit the previous year, when huge market rallies boosted results.

Reporting an eye-watering investment loss of 3.4 trillion yen, SoftBank said its tech-focused Vision Fund has suffered falls “due to a decline in the share prices of most listed portfolio companies”.

In the past six months, the tech-rich US Nasdaq index has lost more than 28% of its value.

The group’s losses were deepened by the many shares it holds in Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing and e-commerce group Alibaba, which have been hit by a crackdown by Beijing on the country’s private sector.

And the icing on the cake was the falling yen, which has recently hit 20-year lows as the gap widens between US tightening and Japan’s ultra-loose monetary policy.

SoftBank attributed a net loss of 706 billion yen to the weaker yen.

In 2019-20, SoftBank reported a then-record net loss of 961.6 billion yen, as the emergence of Covid-19 compounded woes caused by its investment in troubled office-sharing start-up WeWork.

But its earnings rebounded in 2020-21 — when it reported Japan’s biggest-ever annual net profit — after people moved their lives online during the pandemic, sending tech stocks soaring.

In February, SoftBank said the $40 billion sale of its microchip powerhouse Arm Ltd to Nvidia Corp had collapsed because of “significan­t regulatory challenges” over competitio­n concerns, and it now plans to take the unit public.

Nvidia is one of the world’s largest and most valuable computing companies, while British company Arm’s tech dominates the global smartphone market.

SoftBank had announced the deal in 2020, when it was valued at $40 billion, although the sum would have been higher now thanks to a rise in Nvidia’s share price.

Amir Anvarzadeh of Asymmetric Advisors said “all hopes” were now on Arm going public, but warned that a very high price would eventually prove damaging.

“We suspect anything more than $30 billion for Arm will leave it overvalued and vulnerable to a likely selloff soon after.”

“While the tech sector that SoftBank is focused on is not doing well right now, it’s worth taking the long view,’’ Hideki Yasuda, senior analyst at Toyo Securities, told AFP.

“It’s important for investors (like SoftBank) to think about what might happen in 20 years,” he said before the earnings announceme­nt.

“They must accept ups and downs in the short-run,” Yasuda said, noting that it took years for Alibaba to become a viable investment for SoftBank.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? The Tokyo Portcity Takeshiba building, which houses SoftBank Group Corp’s headquarte­rs, in Tokyo.
BLOOMBERG The Tokyo Portcity Takeshiba building, which houses SoftBank Group Corp’s headquarte­rs, in Tokyo.

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