SoftBank Group Corp shares surged to a record after it swung to a quarterly profit, an affirmation for Masayoshi Son’s bets on artificial intelligence players such as Nvidia Corp.
A recovery at SoftBank’s signature Vision Fund and the sale of assets such as its T-Mobile US Inc holdings are helping Son double down on bets geared to help him capitalize on booming investment in AI hardware. SoftBank, which had sold US$4.8 billion worth of its stake in the US telecom company in June, revealed the sale of another US$3 billion of the US carrier’s stock.
That raised the Tokyo-based company’s shares up as much as 13%, the most in four months, setting them on pace for a record-high close on Friday. That’s despite the termination of SoftBank’s ¥500 billion (US$3.4 billion) buyback program, which ended with SoftBank only buying around ¥330 billion of its shares.
Currency gains also contributed to SoftBank’s profit, SMBC Nikko Securities analyst Satoru Kikuchi said in a note to investors. While AI optimism may continue to fuel Softbank’s shares, the end of the buyback program “may limit future upside” when the company announces asset sales to help fund its big AI bets, he said.
The Tokyo-based company reported net income of ¥421.82 billion (US$2.9 billion) in its fiscal first quarter, more than double the average of analyst estimates. The Vision Fund logged a ¥451.39 billion profit, helped by a recovery in tech valuations and gains on holdings such as Coupang Inc., Auto1 Group SE, Symbotic Inc. and Swiggy Ltd.
SoftBank’s earnings got an additional boost from paper gains on its recent purchases of stock in Nvidia and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. The Japanese company increased its stake in Nvidia to more than US$3 billion as of end-March, helping the Japanese investor benefit from the AI accelerator maker’s 46% rally during the three months through June.
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The 67-year-old SoftBank founder seeks to play a more central role in the spread of AI. Central to that push is its chip design unit Arm Holdings Plc and a US$500 billion Stargate data center foray in the US with OpenAI, Oracle Corp. and Abu Dhabi’s tech investment fund MGX.
That Stargate push has been somewhat delayed, Chief Financial Officer Yoshimitsu Goto said, conceding for the first time that the US$500 billion artificial intelligence tie-up with OpenAI was behind schedule. SoftBank will soon begin concrete talks on its first Stargate project, he said. The Tokyo-based investor was not involved in OpenAI’s data center plans in Norway, while OpenAI was leading the rollouts in the United Arab Emirates and Abilene, Texas, he said.
Some of the conversations behind Stargate have slowed due to market volatility, uncertainty around US trade policy and questions around the financial valuations of AI hardware, Bloomberg News reported in May.
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“Things are taking more time than initially expected, but we’d like to speed things up from here,” Goto said during an earnings conference. “We are now focusing all our operations on AI and are working to expand on multiple fronts.”
As part of its multi-pronged push into AI, SoftBank is slated to invest as much as US$30 billion in OpenAI, and it’s inked a US$6.5 billion deal to buy chip designer Ampere Computing Holdings. Son is also courting TSMC and others about taking part in a US$1 trillion AI manufacturing hub in Arizona.
SoftBank’s shares closed at a fresh record high ahead of the earnings release. US President Donald Trump’s threat to unleash 100% chip tariffs but exempt companies moving production to America is infusing optimism for the Stargate project.
“Our longer-term outlook for SoftBank Group is cautiously optimistic, with a consensus toward continued business expansion,” said Ashwin Binwani, founder of Alpha Binwani Capital.
SoftBank shares hit new high on AI growth optimism
But concern over whether SoftBank can manage multiple mass-scale funding needs as interest rates inch up is keeping its stock at a significant discount to the total net asset value of its holdings.
The company has been selling off assets ahead of such mega-projects and deals as the fair value of the Vision Fund portfolio rose US$4.8 billion from the prior quarter. All told, the two Vision Funds sold off assets worth a total of US$3.35 billion, including full exits from nine companies.
To be sure, SoftBank’s total OpenAI investment may be reduced if OpenAI does not restructure into a for-profit entity by the end of the year. And the Ampere deal remains subject to approval by US antitrust regulators and the Committee on Foreign Investment in the US, it said. That acquisition is facing a potentially lengthy probe, Bloomberg reported.