SoftBank considers IPO for Japan wireless unit, said to seek $18 billion

Reuters  |  TOKYO 

By Yoshiyasu and Sam Nussey

(Reuters) - Corp said on Monday it was considering listing its Japanese business, seeking to raise a reported $18 billion in a move that would accelerate the conglomerate's transformation into one of the world's biggest tech investors.

A spin-off - potentially the biggest by a Japanese company in nearly two decades - would also give the unit more autonomy as well as help investors with valuing the business and its parent.

Group, which saw its shares climb 4 percent on the news, has a vast range of holdings including stakes in British chip ARM Holdings, struggling U.

S. service provider as well as Alibaba Holding Ltd.

It has with other investors also set up a $93 billion Vision Fund, that is investing in range of firms to capitalise on a tech future expected to be driven by artificial intelligence, robotics and interconnected devices.

plans to sell some 30 percent of Corp, raising around 2 trillion yen ($18 billion) that would go towards investments in growth, such as buying into companies, the Nikkei newspaper said without citing sources.

It plans to seek approval from the Stock Exchange as early as spring and aims to debut in as well as overseas, possibly London, around autumn, the business daily said.

said in a statement that a listing of the business was one option for its capital strategy but that no such decision had been made.

A 2 trillion yen ($18 billion) would be one of the biggest listings by a Japanese company, rivalling the 2.2 trillion yen 1986 offering of as well as a 2.1 trillion yen listing by a decade later.

"It makes sense to spin off the mobile-phone business using a public offering that would leave in control and provide with more cash to pursue its strategy of investing in companies with potentially high growth prospects," Erik Gordon, a at the of Business.

"It is a way of obtaining capital without adding debt or diluting SoftBank's equity interests in the growth companies."

The domestic telecoms unit, Japan's No. 3 carrier, posted a 4.5 percent rise in operating profit to 720 billion yen in the year ended March on sales of 3.2 trillion yen.

Group's complicated structure and constant stream of new investments have left many investors struggling to value the company with analysts often noting that its market value does not accurately reflect the value of its massive holdings.

SoftBank's market value currently stands at around $92 billion. By contrast, its near 30 percent stake in Alibaba is worth around $140 billion.

Large companies seeking to list in are required to float at least 35 percent of their shares although these rules can be eased when the company is also listing overseas.

(Reporting by Yoshiyasu and Sam Nussey; Additional reporting by and Minami Funakoshi; Writing by William Mallard; Editing by Edwina Gibbs)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, January 15 2018. 10:58 IST