SoftBank Vision Fund posts $4.8 billion gain to drive second straight quarter of group profit

SoftBank Vision Fund posts .8 billion gain to drive second straight quarter of group profit


Masayoshi Son, chairman and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group Corp., speaks at the SoftBank World event in Tokyo, Japan, on Wednesday, July 16, 2025.

Kiyoshi Ota | Bloomberg | Getty Images

SoftBank Group on Thursday reported fiscal first-quarter profit that topped expectations, driven by gains in its Vision Fund tech investment arm.

The Japanese giant reported 421.8 billion yen ($2.87 billion) in the quarter ended June, versus 127.6 billion yen expected, according to LSEG consensus estimates. It is the second straight quarter of profit for SoftBank. The company reported a 174.28 billion yen loss in the same period last year.

In the fiscal first quarter, SoftBank said the value of its Vision Funds rose $4.8 billion. Profit for the Vision Funds segment, which takes into account other factors like expenses, hit 451.4 billion yen in the quarter, versus a loss in the same period last year.

SoftBank has been on spending spree related to AI. The Japanese giant is leading a $40 billion funding round into ChatGPT developer OpenAI and it is currently waiting for its $6.5 proposed acquisition of AI chip firm Ampere Computing to close.

The Vision Fund performance will be welcomed by investors hoping to see those big AI bets start to pay off.

SoftBank said that the rise of the value of the Vision Fund was helped by gains at public companies such as ride-hailing firm Grab, as well as Indian food delivery firm Swiggy. The performance was also aided by private investments in some of firms in India in which the fund has a position.

Meanwhile, SoftBank is a key company in the massive $500 billion Stargate project in the U.S. that aims to build data centers and AI infrastructure in the country. Investors are waiting for details on how SoftBank plans to fund this spending.

In May, SoftBank posted its first annual profit in four years for the fiscal year ended March, helped by gains in SoftBank’s older investments in Alibaba, T-Mobile and Deutsche Telekom.

In the June quarter, SoftBank reported a 256.55 billion yen investment loss for its other holdings, which weighed on the group’s overall profit. The Japanese firm said it posted an investment loss on the sale of shares of T-Mobile and Alibaba, which was partially offset by a gain on shares of semiconductor giant Nvidia.

SoftBank said on Thursday that it sold 13 million shares of T-Mobile in August for $3 billion.

Meanwhile Arm, the chip designer that is majority-owned by SoftBank, contributed a 8.66 billion yen loss to the Japanese company. SoftBank attributed this to increase research and development expenses, which led to investments growing faster than revenues.



Source

5 things Nvidia’s Jensen Huang said about the state of the AI race with China
Technology

5 things Nvidia’s Jensen Huang said about the state of the AI race with China

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Wednesday that the U.S. is “not far ahead” of China in the artificial intelligence race, and that the country needs a “nuanced strategy” to stay on higher ground. Huang has been walking a tense line between the two countries and has praised China’s AI models, including DeepSeek, Alibaba, and Baidu. […]

Read More
Nvidia’s Huang says he’s surprised AMD offered 10% of the company in ‘clever’ OpenAI deal
Technology

Nvidia’s Huang says he’s surprised AMD offered 10% of the company in ‘clever’ OpenAI deal

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said Wednesday that he’s surprised Advanced Micro Devices offered 10% of itself to OpenAI as part of a multibillion-dollar partnership announced earlier this week. “It’s imaginative, it’s unique and surprising, considering they were so excited about their next generation product,” Huang said in an interview with “CNBC’s Squawk Box.” “I’m surprised […]

Read More
Nvidia’s Huang says AI computing demand is up ‘substantially’ in the last 6 months
Technology

Nvidia’s Huang says AI computing demand is up ‘substantially’ in the last 6 months

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said demand is up huge this year as artificial intelligence models develop further from answering simple questions to complex reasoning. “This year, particularly the last six months, demand of computing has gone up substantially,” said Huang on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.” The CEO of the AI chip leader was answering a question […]

Read More