fbpx

Type to search

SoftBank’s Vision Fund May Take $10bn First-Quarter Loss

Sliding values of stocks held by SoftBank’s Vision Fund suggest more bad news when CEO Masayoshi Son reports first-quarter earnings next week


Shares of Alibaba plunged on Thursday after a report that SoftBank Group has moved to sell most of its remaining shares in the Chinese conglomerate.
The Japanese tech investor, led by billionaire Masayoshi Son, has sold $7.2 billion of Alibaba shares this year through pre-paid forward contracts after a $29-billion selldown last year, the FT said. Video screengrab: Asia Financial.

 

Sliding valuations in the listed portfolio of SoftBank’s Vision Fund point to more pain for CEO Masayoshi Son when the group reports April-June earnings on Monday, with an estimate it could face a quarterly loss of more than $10 billion.

That figure for Vision Fund‘s public portfolio loss came from Redex Research analyst Kirk Boodry, after falls in robotics firm AutoStore Holdings, e-commerce firm Coupang and artificial intelligence firm SenseTime Group, whose shares fell by almost half on the last day of June.

While there is limited visibility on valuations of Vision Fund‘s private portfolio, writedowns contributed to the record $26 billion Vision Fund loss reported in May as investor concern over prospects for high-growth stocks feeds through to private markets.

The extent of the reevaluation was underscored when Swedish payment firm Klarna last month raised capital at a valuation 85% lower than at a SoftBank-led funding round the year before.

Writedowns in the private portfolio are unlikely to reflect the current weakness in valuations in the market, Jefferies analyst Atul Goyal said.

Chief executive Son had been investing rapidly through the second Vision Fund, in which he has a personal stake, but in May he pledged to “play defence” and rein in spending amid market turmoil triggered by rising interest rates and political instability.

The 64-year-old billionaire previously racked up personal losses betting on derivatives and publicly traded stocks through the SB Northstar trading arm, which has since been shuttered.

 

Departure of Son’s Lieutenants

Compounding uncertainty at the tech conglomerate is the departure of a string of Son‘s lieutenants. A key architect of SoftBank’s push into investing in late-stage startups, Rajeev Misra, has stepped back from managing Vision Fund 2 to launch his own fund.

The cost of insuring against a default in SoftBank’s debt and its bond yields remains elevated, albeit off last month’s highs, and analysts point to the conglomerate’s constrained financing options given the portfolio weakness.

“Within Vision Fund itself, in the public holdings they have they don’t really have a lot of options,” Redex Research’s Boodry said.

SoftBank has been reliant on its large and liquid stake in e-commerce firm Alibaba Group Holding for financing. The group has now raised as much as $22 billion using the shares, the Financial Times estimated.

The conglomerate is targeting an initial public offering for chip designer Arm in the United States following the collapse of a sale to Nvidia Corp but analysts question the prospects for the listing.

SoftBank launched a 1 trillion yen ($7.5 billion) buyback last November, supporting shares which have fallen by about half from highs in March 2021, but had used more than 60% of the capital by late June.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

ALSO SEE:

SoftBank Posts $13bn Loss as Tech Stocks Portfolio Slumps

SoftBank Sold $1 Billion Stake in Korea’s Coupang

SoftBank, Temasek Pour Cash into FTX US Crypto Exchange

SoftBank Offloads $550m in WeWork Debt, Pushing Up Yield

 

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

logo

AF China Bond