SoftBank Group unveils $5.5 billion stock buyback\, third-quarter profit soars 60 percent

SoftBank Group unveils $5.5 billion stock buyback, third-quarter profit soars 60 percent

Reuters  |  TOKYO 

By Sam Nussey

said it would repurchase 112 million shares worth 600 billion yen ($5.5 billion) in the next 11 months, or about 10.3 percent of its total outstanding shares, excluding treasury stock.

The buyback comes after raised 2.35 trillion yen in December by listing about a third of the shares in domestic telco SoftBank Corp, which on Tuesday reported a 24 percent jump in quarterly operating profit.

SoftBank Group said its operating profit in the October-December quarter was 438.3 billion yen ($3.99 billion) versus 274 billion yen a year earlier. The year-earlier figure used previous accounting standards.

Profits at SoftBank Group are increasingly affected by the valuations of big through its own investing activities and its Saudi-backed Vision Fund, which launched last year with over $90 billion in capital.

At the end of the October-December period, which saw weakness in and fears of a slowdown, the had invested $45.5 billion in 49 firms, including ride-hailing assets transferred from SoftBank Group.

Those investments - including ride-hailing firm Uber Technologies, shared workspace provider WeWork Cos, maker and chip ARM - are valued at $55.3 billion, SoftBank Group said.

"The exact manner in which SoftBank determines the value of its investments remains murky," said in a note ahead of the earnings announcement.

"Without a 'down round' we doubt any of the unlisted investment will be revalued," Lane said, referring to when a company's valuation is reduced in a subsequent financing round.

Among SoftBank's stakes in listed companies, weak demand for in helped to push down the share price of U.S. chipmaker by 50 percent from its October peak.

SoftBank Group said it had offset most of the fall in Nvidia's share price through derivatives contracts.

VALUATIONS

China's slowing growth and its trade war with the are affecting valuations of

Stakes in Chinese ride-hailing firm Didi Chuxing, which is backed by SoftBank Group, have traded at prices implying a valuation of $40-44 billion. That compared to a valuation exceeding $65 billion after its 2018 funding round.

WeWork's higher valuation is based on a further investment by SoftBank Group, which has injected more than $10 billion into the loss-making office-sharing firm now valued at $47 billion.

As the valuations of the increase, investors are looking at SoftBank's exit strategy. Vision Fund's first public exit last year involved the sale of its stake in India's to U.S. [WMT.N] for a $1.5 billion profit.

A successful IPO by Uber, which is expected to list this year, will bolster Vision Fund's strategy and serve as a model for other portfolio companies, analysts say.

SoftBank Group shares closed up 0.6 percent ahead of the earnings announcement.

They are up 16 percent this year, but still 26 percent below their September peak, having tumbled on concerns about financial ties to following the murder of a Saudi

The technology and did not release a forecast for the current business year, saying there were too many uncertain factors.

($1 = 109.7300 yen)

(Reporting by Sam Nussey; editing by Darren Schuettler)

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

First Published: Wed, February 06 2019. 12:48 IST