Veteran stock picker to join 'Son-chan' on SoftBank board
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[May 22, 2021] By
Sam Nussey
TOKYO (Reuters) - The nomination of Koei
Tecmo chair Keiko Erikawa to SoftBank Group's board adds a veteran games
industry executive known for her stock-picking skill, bringing an
authoritative voice after the loss of senior industry figures.
Erikawa, 72, who with CEO husband Yoichi is the executive team behind
the "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" series, has had a long relationship
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, referring to him as "Son-chan" in a 2016
inteview, using a suffix showing affection.
"Erikawa is not the sort of person who would hesitate to express her
views to Son. She speaks plainly," said Hideki Yasuda, an analyst at Ace
Research Institute.
The board changes announced on Friday come after SoftBank lost two
of Japan's most vocal corporate leaders in recent years, Uniqlo parent
Fast Retailing founder Tadashi Yanai and Nidec founder Shigenobu
Nagamori.
That follows a shift by the 63-year-old Son from operating companies to
pure investing. The change is seen as suiting Erikawa, who in addition
to her management chops has built a reputation for savvy investing in
tech stocks.
SoftBank invests in listed stocks through its SB Northstar trading unit
as well as in late-stage startups via its Vision Fund unit.
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SoftBank Corp. placard is prepared during a ceremony to mark the
company's debut on the Tokyo Stock Exchange in Tokyo, Japan December
19, 2018. REUTERS/Issei Kato/File Photo
At March-end Koei had 113 billion yen ($1.04 billion) in investment securities
on its balance sheet, up from 71 billion yen a year earlier.
"I am close to Son and sometimes compared to him as a famous pro investor, but
he's a specialist. I often joke I'm just doing it on the side," Erikawa said in
an interview with Nikkei Veritas earlier this year.
A COVID-19 pandemic induced slump in portfolio company valuations last year saw
a period of alignment between SoftBank and investors calling for change, with
the group launching a $23 billion share buyback and reforming the board's
structure.
Following the subsequent recovery in valuations, investors fret that Son has
less incentive to listen to external voices.
An outgoing board member, Waseda University business professor Yuko Kawamoto,
praised Son's willingness to listen to others but called on the group to
"develop an even better form of governance that is genuinely representative of
SBG and its unique qualities."
($1 = 108.9400 yen)
(Reporting by Sam Nussey; Editing by Stephen Coates and Louise Heavens)
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