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SoftBank Set For Biggest Two-Day Rally Since 2020 As Arm Surges

SoftBank shares rose 12% in Tokyo trading on Friday, extending their two-day gain to about 24%.

Masayoshi Son, chairman and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group.
Masayoshi Son, chairman and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group.

SoftBank Group Corp. shares surged for a second day to the highest level in almost three years, bolstered by a continued upward climb by its crown jewel, Arm Holdings Plc. 

Arm surged 48% as artificial intelligence spending helped bolster the chip designer’s forecast. Chief Executive Officer Rene Haas said on Bloomberg Television that the opportunities presented by AI are just beginning to be recognized. 

SoftBank shares rose 12% in Tokyo trading on Friday, extending their two-day gain to about 24% and heading for their best such rally since March 2020. The stock gained 11% on Thursday after Arm reported its financial results, closing at the highest level since July 2021.

SoftBank Set For Biggest Two-Day Rally Since 2020 As Arm Surges

SoftBank owns about 90% of Arm and founder Masayoshi Son has pledged to explore ways to use Arm’s chip designs as he pursues AI-related investments. The Tokyo-based company reported its first profit after four quarters of losses on Thursday, with its Vision Fund also logging a profit in the December quarter.

“Arm’s results, while singularly impressive, were part of a diverse combination of tailwinds stemming from SoftBank’s AI, telecom, and broader tech portfolio,” Macquarie analysts Paul Golding and Emma Liang wrote in a note. 

Masayoshi Son, chairman and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group.Photographer: Toru Hanai/Bloomberg
Masayoshi Son, chairman and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group.Photographer: Toru Hanai/Bloomberg

“The remaining question now is on net new investments, whether cash will or can be deployed in the context of quickly rising AI valuations, and high-quality criteria for investing from mgmt’s perspective,” the note said.

SoftBank Swings to Profit and Refocuses Its Strategy Around Arm

New investment activity by the second Vision Fund dwindled to $90 million, a fraction of the billions that SoftBank used to wield in the startup space. Bets on startups have been outpaced by exit activity in recent quarters. 

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“New investments are crucial to sustain its profit recovery,” said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Marvin Lo. “Results are good in general. The only concern I have is that the company might be struggling to find good AI investment opportunities, echoed by a decline in investment value.”

(Updates with latest share price move and chart)

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