Khaleej Times

SoftBank to invest $3b in US start-up

- Thomas Wilson and Julie Zhu

tokyo/hong kong — Japan’s SoftBank Group Corp is close to making an investment in US office-sharing start-up WeWork expected to be worth over $3 billion, CNBC reported on Monday, as it expands its reach beyond tech and telecoms.

Led by founder Masayashi Son, SoftBank has made a string of surprising acquisitio­ns and investment­s over the past months, most recently an all-cash deal to buy asset manager Fortress Investment Group.

The deals come as SoftBank moves towards cutting-edge tech investment­s as telecoms services markets mature, announcing last year the creation of a tech investment fund with Saudi Arabia that could grow to $100 billion and make the group one of the world’s largest private equity investors.

SoftBank is looking at a $2 billion primary tranche of funding in New York-based WeWork, followed by a secondary round worth more than $1 billion, CNBC reported, citing an anonymous source.

The company could increase the size of the secondary investment to nearly $2 billion for a total investment of almost $4 billion, CNBC added. If the deal closed, WeWork would be valued at more than $20 billion.

SoftBank had been in discussion­s for some time regarding an investment, two people at one of WeWork’s investors said.

WeWork, which provides shared workspaces to start-ups in the Americas, Europe, Hong Kong and Shanghai, plans to expand to Beijing in May, co-founder Miguel McKelvey told reporters in Hong Kong last week.

It will continue to raise capital for expansion ahead of an expected public listing, McKelvey said, without indicating a time frame.

Chinese private equity giant Hony Capital, its backer Legend Holdings and property developer China Oceanwide Holdings, among others, last year ploughed $700 million into WeWork.

The deal valued WeWork at $16.7 billion, Hony said — less than that reported by CNBC but still making it among the world’s most valuable start-ups.

SoftBank shares fell 2.3 per cent in morning trade, compared with a 1.4 per cent fall for the benchmark Nikkei average .

SoftBank, a diverse company that holds stakes in US carrier Sprint, Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba and other firms, last year bought chip designer ARM Holdings, Britain’s most valuable technology company, for $32 billion.

Son also promised a $50 billion investment and 50,000 new jobs in the United States after meeting US President Donald Trump in early December.

Some of SoftBank’s moves have caused concern among analysts, as it is wrestling with a heavy debt pile. — Reuters

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Masayashi Son promised a $50 billion investment and 50,000 new jobs in the US after meeting President Donald Trump.
— Bloomberg Masayashi Son promised a $50 billion investment and 50,000 new jobs in the US after meeting President Donald Trump.

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