The world’s largest tech fund is estimated to have lost about $18.6 billion on its public portfolio alone during the quarter ended Mar. 31, even greater than the record $18.3 billion drop marked in the fiscal second quarter, according to Kirk Boodry, an analyst at
Research who publishes on SmartKarma. That would mean a loss for the Vision Fund unit of about $10 billion, accounting for SoftBank’s stake in each fund, Boodry estimates.
It’s a drastic reversal from a year ago when Son took the stage in Tokyo to announce SoftBank had earned more money in a single quarter than any Japanese company in history. The company he founded about 40 years earlier hit net profit of 1.93 trillion yen ($17.7 billion at the time), eclipsing Japan Inc. heavyweights such as Toyota Motor Corp. and NTT Corp.
“It’s not normal. Investors, markets are starting to get worried,” Boodry said. When it comes to “the scale or potential of losses, markets seem to be building in more downside in general.”
SoftBank’s two Vision Funds have been hit hard by plunging tech valuations as global interest rates climb and China tightens its regulatory grip on the industry. South Korea’s Coupang Inc. and China’s Didi Global Inc. have been among the biggest drags for the Vision Fund, with each of them posting their biggest quarterly share-price slump of 40% and 50%, respectively.
The Vision Fund’s biggest loss to date — 825.1 billion yen — came in the fiscal second quarter when global stock markets tumbled. The unit then regained profitability, earning 109 billion yen in the three months ended Dec. 31.
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The actual bottom line for the fiscal fourth quarter will hinge on how SoftBank marks the value of its vast number of privately-held holdings. These include ByteDance Ltd., which operates the popular short video platform TikTok, and India’s Oyo Hotels.
“There is much less visibility on this part of the portfolio, particularly at Vision Fund 2 where many of these investments are smaller or at an earlier stage,” Boodry wrote in a note to investors. Still, “SoftBank will likely take meaningful losses in the private portfolio too.”
A sharp downturn in global stock markets is working against SoftBank’s business model, which Son repositioned into an investment holding company with the Vision Fund in 2016. A series of scandals and missteps from WeWork Inc., Wirecard AG and Greensill Capital have led to international scrutiny.
Now jitters over further tech valuation falls have dented Son’s reputation and raised concern over the sustainability of its business. The lack of transparency over how much of the funds’ assets are collateralized is another factor fanning market anxiety.
“Softbank’s entire business structure is dependent on one key assumption and that is ever-rising stock prices,” specifically in tech stocks, which are leading the current market sell-off, Amir Anvarzadeh of Asymmetric Advisors wrote in a note. This “fundamental flaw” is being increasingly exposed by the bear market, he said.
The Vision Fund lost money on 32 out of 34 public holdings last quarter, according to Nomura Securities Co. analyst Daisaku Masuno. That includes South Korea’s Coupang ($5.4 billion), Singapore’s Grab Holdings Ltd. ($2.4 billion), China’s Didi ($2.4 billion), India’s
($1.3 billion) and the U.S.’s DoorDash Inc. ($1.1 billion).
Unrealized losses in the public portfolio were in the range of $37 billion to $38 billion for fiscal 2021, according to Boodry. All together, Vision Fund’s public portfolio companies are down more than 50% from their all-time highs.
To be sure, SoftBank losses are largely on paper, just as his profits were a year ago. Few analysts provide estimates, at least publicly. Because of the company’s transformation into an investment holding company, it has to log mark-to-market values on holdings. Warren Buffett has long argued such quarterly figures for investment firms like his Berkshire Hathaway are almost meaningless.
Still, SoftBank’s latest quarter could be a stain on Son’s reputation as he strives to reinvent himself and become the world’s most influential venture capitalist.
Son had built his Vision Fund initiative on his track record of picking startups, including a bet on China e-commerce giant Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. that became one of the most successful venture deals of all time. But even that deal has lost luster, as Beijing’s crackdown on Jack Ma’s empire has wiped out more than 70% of Alibaba’s value since its peak in October 2020.
The Nasdaq 100, a key benchmark for tech shares, is down about 25% year-to-date and on track for its worst annual performance since 2008. The measure rallied 27% last year following a whopping 48% gain in 2020.
Tech-heavy funds have been hit across the globe including Chase Coleman’s Tiger Global Management, one of the most successful equity hedge funds of the past two decades. The fund posted the industry’s largest loss so far in 2022, with the tech rout helping to erase $16 billion from its hedge and long-only funds.
Dan Baker of Morningstar Inc. is among those who are less pessimistic about SoftBank’s prospects. While the performance for tech funds that invest in early-stage companies will be just as volatile, SoftBank – with its scale – will have greater access and more opportunities to invest, he said.
“It’s not for everyone,” Baker said. “But if you’re willing to accept the volatility, then if you look at the long-term performance of the company, it’s actually been pretty decent.”