SoftBank Vision Fund posts $26 billion loss; Son pledges defence
Send a link to a friend
[May 12, 2022] By
Sam Nussey
TOKYO (Reuters) -Japan's SoftBank Group
Corp reported a record $26.2 billion loss at its Vision Fund investment
arm on Thursday, as rising interest rates and political instability
whiplashed high-growth tech stocks.
The loss was in stark contrast to a year earlier when SoftBank delivered
a record annual profit, putting founder and CEO Masayoshi Son's strategy
of concentrating heavily on riskier, high-growth stocks under more
scrutiny.
Investors are now increasingly questioning whether many of the once
high-flyers it has invested in have a clear path to profitability. South
Korean e-commerce firm Coupang is trading 70% below its listing price.
Ridehailers Didi Global Inc and Grab Holdings, also tumbled during the
January-March quarter.
"When the world is in disorder, SoftBank should play defence," Son said
at a subdued briefing following the earnings announcement, pledging to
bolster the group's cash position through asset monetisation and tighten
investment criteria.
Son's earnings presentations are closely watched for clues into his
thinking about the future of the sprawling tech conglomerate. On
Thursday, he repeatedly emphasised the group's financial prudence and
the prospects for chip designer Arm, which SoftBank hopes to list in the
United States.
Vision Fund has 475 companies in its portfolio and made 43 investments
during the fourth quarter. It is slowing the pace of investment as
private prices lag the fall in public markets.
While 20 portfolio companies raised funds at higher valuations during
the quarter, SoftBank also marked down some of its unlisted assets, in
sectors such as consumer, fintech and transportation, contributing to
the record loss.
REVOLUTION, DELAYED
SoftBank was likely to invest half or even a quarter as much as last
year, Son said, as part of a pledge to keep the group's loan-to-value
ratio, which was 20.4% at March-end, below 25%.
[to top of second column] |
SoftBank Corp's logo is pictured at a news conference in Tokyo,
Japan, February 4, 2021. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon
Son, 64, has described SoftBank as a goose laying golden eggs but the
pace of listings has slowed with one notable recent exception,
Indonesia's GoTo, sliding since going public last month.
SoftBank's own shares fell 8% ahead of earnings to 4,491 yen and are down more
than half from highs in March last year. The group is 40% through a 1 trillion
yen buyback programme launched in November.
The group's annual net loss was 1.7 trillion yen ($13.15 billion). The Vision
Fund unit's assets, including the Latin American funds, were worth $175.6
billion at March-end. That compared to an acquisition cost of $141.6 billion.
SoftBank also recorded, in its non-consolidated earnings, a 669.5 billion yen
loss due to its SB Northstar trading arm, which placed bets on listed stocks and
derivatives but racked up personal losses for Son.
The unit's activity was part of a push to diversify SoftBank's portfolio beyond
e-commerce company Alibaba, whose shares have fallen by more than two thirds as
regulatory action roils China tech companies.
"There are wonderful companies in China and we will invest in them but with
smaller deals," said Son.
Even as Son emphasised his current conservatism, the billionaire reiterated his
belief in the "information revolution" with a graph showing the current market
downturn as a blip before internet companies resumed their upward climb.
"In a year or two I think the stock market will recover and then the timing to
go on the offensive will return," Son said.
($1 = 129.2600 yen)
(Editing by David Dolan, Jacqueline Wong, Elaine Hardcastle)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|