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SoftBank in The Red as Vision Fund $5.52bn Slump Weighs

The results are likely to make investors even more keen to see an initial public offering (IPO) of British chip designer Arm


The logo of SoftBank Group Corp is seen at the company's headquarters in Tokyo, June 30, 2016. REUTERS/Toru Hanai
The logo of SoftBank Group Corp is seen at the company's headquarters in Tokyo. Photo: Reuters

 

Japan’s SoftBank Group posted a quarterly loss on Tuesday, as its giant Vision Fund investment unit remained in the red for a fourth straight quarter.

The Vision Fund, known for its big bets on technology startups, reported an investment loss of 730.36 billion yen ($5.52 billion) in the fiscal third quarter. At SoftBank itself, the net loss totalled 783.42 billion yen, compared with a 29.05 billion yen profit a year earlier.

The results are likely to make investors even more keen to see an initial public offering (IPO) of British chip designer Arm, considered one of the sprawling conglomerate’s prize assets. SoftBank aims to list Arm by the end of 2023, the company said.

 

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The market turmoil since last year – and SoftBank’s results themselves – show how rising interest rates, deepening US-China tensions and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have worked to blunt investor appetite for riskier assets, casting a shadow over the Japanese group’s vast portfolio of startup investments.

Arm, though, has made “good progress in terms of being IPO-ready,” Navneet Govil, the fund’s chief financial officer, told Reuters after the results, adding there were about 30 companies in the fund’s portfolio that are set to go public when markets are ready.

SoftBank said the Vision Fund unit had significantly curtailed new investments and was continuing to sell some older ones as part of “prudent defensive financial management” amid the challenging market environment.

The unit’s investment loss of 730 billion yen in the October-December quarter was down from a loss of 1.38 trillion yen in the previous quarter.

“If there is a silver lining, the quarterly loss was the lowest of the last four quarters,” Redex Research analyst Kirk Boodry said in a research note.

The bulk of the loss at the Vision Fund unit came from a steep decline in the valuation of investments in unlisted companies. The unit had investments in 348 companies as of end-December, of which 311 are private.

Among listed portfolio companies, Indonesian ride-hailing company Goto Gojek Tokopedia PT, South Korean e-commerce platform Coupang Inc and workspace provider WeWork Inc contributed to the loss.

 

Arm Braced For Tech Slowdown

Arm posted a 28% jump in quarterly net sales to $746 million, helped by higher royalty revenue from its high-end 5G smartphone chips.

It has a more than 95% market share of the main communication chips used in mobile devices. Still, SoftBank warned the chip designer is also bracing for the impact of a broader tech industry slowdown.

“Some of Arm’s customers have indicated that inventory levels are very high across the value chain, which may result in their revenues declining for a short period until inventory levels are lower,” it said in a statement.

The net loss also marked a sharp turnaround from the 3 trillion yen net profit SoftBank reported in the prior July-September quarter, when it was buoyed by the sale of some of its stake in China’s Alibaba Group Holding.

SoftBank has invested heavily in artificial intelligence and other high-tech startups through the Vision Fund in recent years, delivering both record profits and heady optimism about future valuations.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean O’Meara

 

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Alibaba Sale Shows SoftBank Cooling on China Tech

 

 

Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.