HomeNewsBusinessStartupSoftBank's Masayoshi Son bats for asset monetisation as he bids adieu to earnings calls

SoftBank's Masayoshi Son bats for asset monetisation as he bids adieu to earnings calls

Addressing the current market downturn as the third biggest after the dotcom bust and the Lehmann crisis, Son said that the Japanese investment conglomerate will monetise ‘whatever it can’ to survive through this economic downturn.

November 11, 2022 / 19:26 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son
SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son

‘Monetisation’ was the most-used word during Masayoshi Son’s 20-minute-long post-earnings speech on November 11, which was much shorter than his usual 45-minute-long talks. This was his last post-earnings address ‘for the foreseeable future,’ as his CFO Yoshimitu Goto will lead the earnings call hereon.

SoftBank reported a net profit of 3.03 trillion yen ($21.77 billion) in the three months to September 30, thanks to a 5.37 trillion yen ($37 billion) one-time gain related to the early settlement of prepaid forward contracts using Alibaba’s shares, the company’s regulatory filings showed.

Story continues below Advertisement

This time around the 65-year-old billionaire had dialled down his usual vibrant presentations that are full of charts and graphs. However, the raconteur in him was in full flow.

In his previous address, Son showed a portrait of Tokugawa Ieyasu, the founder and first shogun (military commander) of Japan’s Tokugawa shogunate, or military dictatorship. He said the picture precisely demonstrated his feelings after Softbank had recorded a multi-billion dollar loss for the second straight quarter. The picture was drawn after Ieyasu suffered a loss at the battle of Mikatagahara.