Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Tech-fund firm to sell assets

SoftBank planning $41B in offerings to buy stock, cut debt

- BEN DOOLEY

TOKYO — SoftBank, operator of the world’s largest tech fund, said Monday that it would sell as much as $41 billion in assets as it seeks to vacuum up its own shares, which have dropped precipitou­sly in the past month.

SoftBank has used its $100 billion investment fund to bet heavily on companies offering services, such as hailing rides and booking hotels, that are likely to take a significan­t financial hit as consumers stay home amid the coronaviru­s outbreak.

In a statement released Monday morning, SoftBank said it would use $18 billion from the sale of its assets to purchase its own shares over the next year. The amount is on top of a $4.5 billion buyback announced earlier this month.

Taken together, the company could retire as much as 45% of its outstandin­g stock, it said. The rest of the money will be used to pay down the company’s debt and shore up its cash reserves.

The company’s share price went into free fall in mid-February, dropping more than 50%, but the announceme­nt Monday seemed to ease investors’ anxiety. SoftBank

shares were up nearly 19% at the close of trading in Tokyo.

Masayoshi Son, the company’s founder and chief, said in the statement that the planned buyback would be the largest ever for the company and would significan­tly increase its cash holdings.

“This will allow us to strengthen our balance sheet while significan­tly reducing debt,” he said.

The move is also aimed at enhancing SoftBank’s credit rating, the company said. Last week, S&P Global Ratings changed the company’s outlook to “negative,” pointing to its outstandin­g debt and the earlier decision to buy back shares.

SoftBank did not specify which assets it intends to sell.

In recent months, SoftBank has come under pressure from activist hedge fund Elliot Management, which has taken a multibilli­on-dollar stake in the company and urged it to spend as much as $20 billion to drive up its share price.

SoftBank has spent the past several months trying to recover investor confidence after the dizzying fall of office-space company WeWork, one of Son’s flagship investment­s. WeWork was forced to withdraw its initial public offering after investors began questionin­g its corporate governance and the behavior of its chief executive.

SoftBank was forced to foot the bill for the collapse, putting together a multibilli­on-dollar rescue package. SoftBank said this month that it might walk back part of its WeWork deal, threatenin­g to withdraw an offer to buy $3 billion worth of WeWork shares.

As a result of the WeWork debacle, SoftBank booked billions of dollars in losses — compounded by disappoint­ing showings for other major investment­s. In the last three months of 2019, SoftBank reported a loss of $2 billion, although Son said the financial hit would soon be erased by growth in other investment­s.

The economic chaos sown by the coronaviru­s outbreak, however, is a new threat to SoftBank’s portfolio. Some of its flagship investment­s, like ride-hailing company Uber and Indian hospitalit­y startup Oyo, are likely to experience steep drops in revenue as parts of the world retreat into quarantine.

 ??  ?? SoftBank said Monday that it would sell up to $41 billion in assets and use the proceeds to buy its own stock, pay down debt and raise its credit rating.
(AP/Koji Sasahara)
SoftBank said Monday that it would sell up to $41 billion in assets and use the proceeds to buy its own stock, pay down debt and raise its credit rating. (AP/Koji Sasahara)

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