
Japan’s SoftBank Group (9984.T) posted a surprise loss but said it was dipping its toes back into new investments after its Vision Fund unit returned to the black for the first time in six quarters.
The Vision Fund unit booked an investment gain of about 160 billion yen ($1.1 billion) for the April-June period, helped by an increased valuation for Arm, the chip designer slated for an initial public offering later this year.
Without the fillip from Arm, the picture was less rosy with the company’s Vision Funds reporting a combined loss of 13 billion yen.
The investment giant has been in “defence mode” for the past two years as tech valuations crashed due to sharply higher interest rates and jitters that hit the global banking sector. But in June, founder and CEO Masayoshi Son said he was planning to shift to “offence” mode amid excitement over advances in artificial intelligence.
That shift was borne out in the first-quarter results, with Chief Financial Officer Yoshimitsu Goto telling reporters on Tuesday that the company was “timidly” embarking on selective new investments with a focus on AI.
The Vision Fund unit made investments totalling $1.56 billion in the quarter. It also divested around $890 million worth of holdings including full exits of three portfolio companies and partial exits of several public portfolio firms.
This report’s information was first seen on REUTERS; to read more, click this link.