SoftBank shares hit 2-decade high on record Vision Fund profit

SoftBank's shares were up 3.3 per cent at 9,800 yen at 03:56 GMT having earlier shot past 10,000 yen. PHOTO: AFP

TOKYO (REUTERS) - Japan's SoftBank Group shares climbed above 10,000 yen (S$126.85) apiece on Tuesday (Feb 9), hitting two-decade highs, a day after the group's Vision Fund unit reported record profits as portfolio company listings accelerate.

SoftBank's shares were up 3.3 per cent at 9,800 yen at 03:56 GMT having earlier shot past 10,000 yen, the biggest intraday jump in two months. On Monday, SoftBank reported a bounce back in the value of its portfolio after startups like home-selling platform Opendoor went public.

With equity raising running at record levels, major assets from the first US$100 billion (S$133 billion) Vision Fund portfolio expected to go public include ride-hailing firms Didi and Grab.

The Japanese conglomerate is "effectively owner of the most lucrative portfolio amidst an ongoing retail IPO frenzy," Jefferies analyst Atul Goyal wrote in a note, referring to initial public offerings.

Most of the value of the first fund is locked up in a small number of large assets, which also include e-commerce firm Coupang and TikTok-owner Bytedance, in contrast to smaller bets by Vision Fund 2.

Frothy markets have seen the value of many of SoftBank's assets, or "golden eggs" as chief executive officer Masayoshi Son termed them on Monday, climb with the value of its assets standing at US$221 billion at the end of December.

That is US$37 billion lower than three months earlier after the share price of Mr Son's largest "egg", Alibaba, tumbled following the regulatory halt of the IPO of its fintech affiliate Ant in November.

"The explosion in market liquidity over the last 9-10 months has played a huge role and we believe SoftBank success correlates closely with how U.S. tech trades going forward," Redex Research analyst Kirk Boodry wrote in a note.

Japan's benchmark share index was trading at a 30-year high on Tuesday after Wall Street closed at an all-time high overnight.

SoftBank "looks overvalued at current levels but we would expect a turnaround only if the tech market cools off," Morningstar analyst Dan Baker wrote in a note.

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