Tech

SoftBank shares drop after its Vision Fund tech investment unit posts a $32 billion record loss

Key Points
  • SoftBank shares closed 3.68% lower in Tokyo.
  • The company said on Thursday that its Vision Fund segment lost a record 4.3 trillion Japanese yen ($32 billion) for its fiscal year ending Mar. 31.
  • SoftBank is also gearing up for the IPO of Arm, the British chipmaker it acquired in 2016. Arm has filed confidentially in the U.S. for a listing. SoftBank's CFO said the IPO process is "going smoothly."

In this article

SoftBank's Vision Fund posted a record loss in the year ended Mar. 31, 2023. The flagship tech investment unit has been hit by the falling prices of tech stocks.
Akio Kon | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Shares of Japanese tech investor SoftBank fell on Friday after the company reported a record loss at its Vision Fund tech investment unit.

SoftBank shares closed 3.68% lower in Tokyo.

The company said on Thursday that its Vision Fund segment lost a record 4.3 trillion Japanese yen ($32 billion) for its fiscal year ending Mar. 31.

It reported a loss on investments at its Vision Funds of 5.28 trillion Japanese yen.

The $100 billion Vision Fund was launched in 2017 under the stewardship of SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son and shook up the tech investing world.

It invested in some of the highest-profile tech firms in the world, but some of those bets, such as that on WeWork, turned sour.

The Vision Fund, which also has exposure to Chinese tech firms, has also suffered from Beijing's crackdown on the domestic tech sector and subsequent plunge in share prices. SoftBank said Thursday that it had logged losses on its investment in SenseTime, the Chinese artificial intelligence company.

And while there has been a recovery in the tech-heavy Nasdaq in the U.S. this year to date, over SoftBank's fiscal year — which ended on Mar. 31 — the index is still lower. Tech stocks have faced headwinds from interest rate rises around the world which have forced investors to move out of riskier assets such as high-growth equities.

To weather the storm, SoftBank has been selling down stakes in Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce giant that made Son and SoftBank its fortune, as well as U.S. ride-hailing company Uber.

SoftBank's management pledged a year ago to go into "defense" mode and be more disciplined in their investment strategy. The pace of investing has slowed down in recent months.

But the company is now looking toward what it considers the next investment opportunity: artificial intelligence.

"AI is finally here," Yoshimitsu Goto, chief financial officer at SoftBank said at a press conference Thursday.

Goto questioned whether SoftBank should now move to "offense" mode.

SoftBank's Vision Funds posts $39 billion loss
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SoftBank's Vision Funds posts $39 billion loss

"With those situations should we just keep in defense or should we keep a balance with offense?" Goto asked.

SoftBank is also gearing up for the initial public offering of Arm, the British chipmaker it acquired in 2016. Arm has filed confidentially in the U.S. for a listing. Goto said the IPO process was "going smoothly."