With SoftBank Rally, Founder Masayoshi Son Adds $12 Bn To Fortune
SoftBank Group founder Masayoshi Son has enjoyed a $12 billion renaissance the past three months, easing the pressure on his intricately engineered personal finances.
With SoftBank Group’s shares surging to their highest price in two decades on Thursday, Son’s net worth hit $20 billion, more than doubling from $8.4 billion in March, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. It is the first time the 62-year-old’s fortune has topped $20 billion since January 2013, when the ranking first started tracking his wealth.
ALSO READ: Big, small insurers toy with pandemic-proof policies for post-Covid world
The calculation excludes about $13.3 billion of his SoftBank Group shares pledged as collateral, representing some 40 per cent of his stake, according to regulatory filings. A further 26 per cent of his holding is lent out for a fee to different entities, mostly brokerages, likely to add liquidity to the market. Those shares are included in Son’s net worth calculation because he retains control over them.
“For those lending shares, it’s about creating incremental revenue,” said Andrew Dyson, CEO of the International Securities Lending Association. He noted such transactions ease the execution of trades, while enabling hedging and shorting strategies. “Lending out securities generates hundreds of millions of dollars in fees a quarter.”
ALSO READ: Govt has $76-million outstanding loans from Reserve Bank of India
SoftBank shares have surged 133 per cent from a low in March, taking the Tokyo-based company’s market value to $123 billion. While its Vision Fund lost almost $18 billion in the latest fiscal year as it wrote down the value of investments in WeWork, Uber Technologies and others, record equity buybacks and a series of wins have helped the stock recover.
SoftBank sold part of its stake in T-Mobile last month, and an online home-insurance provider that it’s backing more than doubled on its US debut in July.
JPMorgan's Berlin Moment: Chase Takes On Europe
There is something quietly symbolic about JPMorgan Chase choosing Berlin as its gateway into continental Europe. In a fo... Read more
What Strategy's Bitcoin Sale Really Tells Us
There is a moment in every bull run when the narrative starts to fray. Not with a crash, not with a scandal, but with so... Read more
Coutts Sets Scope On New Continent
Coutts steps into private marketsCoutts, the private bank best known for serving Britain’s wealthiest families and the... Read more
From Cypherpunk To Citadel
How Crypto Moved from the Wild West to the Mainstream Financial SystemA long-form analysis of Bitcoin's journey from fri... Read more
ACB Securities: Building Scale, Trust & Innovation
ACB Securities: Building Scale, Trust and Innovation in Vietnam’s Capital MarketsACB Securities (ACBS) is emerging as ... Read more
War Risk Returns To Markets As VIX Surges
For most of the past year, global markets behaved as though geopolitical risk had largely disappeared. Inflation was eas... Read more