Alibaba shares plunge on SoftBank's stake sale report
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[April 13, 2023] By
Kiyoshi Takenaka and Ankur Banerjee
TOKYO (Reuters) -Japanese technology investor SoftBank Group Corp has
moved to sell almost all of its remaining shares in Alibaba Group
Holding Ltd, the Financial Times reported, sending the Chinese
e-commerce major's stock tumbling.
The sale would come as valuations of China's big tech firms have started
recovering this year after an end to two years of heightened regulatory
scrutiny, providing a window for long-time investors such as SoftBank to
reduce exposure to an economy battered by strict pandemic policies and
Sino-U.S. tension.
SoftBank's share price closed down 1% on Thursday, versus a 0.3% rise in
the broader market. Alibaba, one of the most valuable assets in
SoftBank's portfolio, tumbled as much as 5.2% in Hong Kong after the
report before paring the loss to 2%.
That followed a 5.2% Wednesday plunge for Tencent Holdings Ltd after the
social media giant's top shareholder, the Netherlands' Prosus NV, said
it may sell more of its shares, underscoring selling pressure on Chinese
tech names.
SoftBank has been seeking ways to monetise its stake in Alibaba, which
the Japanese conglomerate bought into more than two decades ago with
just $20 million spending.
"They have been clear that ... they need to monetise profitable
holdings," Jon Withaar, head of Asia special situations at Pictet Asset
Management, said of SoftBank.
"Perhaps some expected that they may slow the pace of their selling in
now that their Arm IPO is moving closer to completion, but ultimately
everything they are doing is within the scope of what they have told the
market."
Neither SoftBank nor Alibaba responded to Reuters' requests for comment.
Alibaba's U.S.-listed stock fell 1.3% in after-market trade on
Wednesday.
SoftBank aims to list British chip designer Arm this year in an initial
public offering (IPO) that would raise at least $8 billion, people
familiar with the deal told Reuters last month.
On Wednesday, the FT said forward sales based on filings at the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission showed SoftBank's Alibaba stake would
eventually fall to 3.8% from almost 15%.
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SoftBank Corp's logo is pictured at a
news conference in Tokyo, Japan, February 4, 2021. REUTERS/Kim
Kyung-Hoon
The Japanese group, led by billionaire founder Masayoshi Son, has
sold about $7.2 billion worth of Alibaba shares this year through
prepaid forward contracts, the newspaper said.
SoftBank said the transactions reflected a shift to "defensive mode"
to address an uncertain business environment and that it would
provide details in its quarterly earnings results announcement in
May, the British newspaper reported.
"China's regulatory environment in the internet sector turned
drastically tougher in recent years, and this is SoftBank simply
responding to the changing environment, as it has already been
doing," said SBI Securities analyst Shinji Moriyuki. "It is well
within the realms of expectations that the proportion of Chinese
shares among its total investment will shrink further."
SoftBank booked a $34 billion gain last year by cutting its Alibaba
stake to 14.6% from 23.7%, as the firm sought to shore up cash
reserves amid steep losses incurred by its Vision Fund.
Vision Fund, which upended the tech world with big bets on startups,
posted a staggering 8 trillion yen ($60 billion) loss in calendar
2022 as market turmoil slashed portfolio firms' valuations,
prompting SoftBank to raise cash.
At the time, it also used prepaid forward contracts - a type of
derivative contract that allows investors to hedge risk.
Alibaba has lost more than two-thirds of its value from highs
touched in late 2020, hit by increased regulatory action in the
technology sector that included a hefty fine on Alibaba and scrutiny
of founder Jack Ma's business empire.
The Chinese firm plans to split into six units and explore
fundraisings or listings for most of them, marking the biggest
restructuring in its 24-year history.
($1 = 133.1900 yen)
(Reporting by Yuvraj Malik in Bengaluru, Ankur Banerjee in Singapore
and Kiyoshi Takenaka in Tokyo; Writing by Miyoung Kim; Editing by
Krishna Chandra Eluri and Christopher Cushing)
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