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Masayoshi Son’s Personal Stake in SoftBank Trading Unit Draws Fire

Son’s Personal Stake in SoftBank Trading Unit Draws Fire

SoftBank Group Corp.’s already controversial stock and options trading program is drawing fresh fire from investors because of Masayoshi Son’s personal stake in the trading.

Son faced a barrage of questions about the transactions on a late-evening call with analysts and fund managers after an earnings announcement Monday, according to people who took part in the briefing. SoftBank has poured about $20 billion into tech stocks and derivatives through a unit in which the billionaire personally holds a one-third stake.

Several people on the call pointed to the structure as a corporate governance concern, the people said, asking to remain unnamed because the details of the discussion aren’t public. Son denied there was a conflict of interest and described it as remuneration for his investment expertise. Other fund managers charge fees, he said, according to one of the people. Son added that SoftBank’s board cleared the structure in a vote from which he recused himself, the person said.

A representative for SoftBank declined to comment.

For all the controversy generated by the trading unit, SoftBank’s performance has been mixed. A 292 billion yen ($2.8 billion) derivative loss in the September quarter helped all but wipe out gains in the first quarter. That left a little over $1 million in gains in the six months ended Sept. 30, a surprising result given the rally in most tech stocks.

“It remains a mystery to me how SoftBank’s investment in listed stocks could result in losses, assuming they’re mostly big tech shares,” Bloomberg Intelligence senior analyst Anthea Lai said. “It’s hard to tell what they did. It could be catching the direction wrong or bad timing, or a bit of both.”

Some analysts questioned why SoftBank is getting involved in such securities trading at all.

“Net derivative positions might be small as a percentage of asset-value, but SBG’s motivations are not clear,” Atul Goyal, senior analyst at Jefferies, wrote in a report. “For such a long-term investor as Mr. Son, we don’t understand the attraction of short-term call-spreads.”

Son has been on a selling spree, unloading $53 billion of assets in a move originally meant to help reduce debt and fund buybacks. He has also used some of the proceeds to invest in U.S. tech stocks in what the company described as a liquidity-management strategy. But the foray into derivatives trading proved costly when it was first disclosed in September. SoftBank shareholders, worried that Son was off on another one of his adventures, cut the company’s market value by as much as $17 billion.

“SoftBank is more of punt on technology names,” Amir Anvarzadeh, a market strategist at Asymmetric Advisors in Singapore, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “As long as the technology rally continues, they should do OK. But once that music stops, there is absolutely no point in investing in SoftBank.”

SoftBank acquired 1.7 trillion yen ($16.2 billion) of “highly liquid listed stocks” in the quarter ended in September, including a $6.3 billion investment in Amazon.com Inc., $2.2 billion in Facebook Inc. and $1.8 billion in Zoom Video Communications Inc. The operation, in which Son personally holds the 33% stake, is managed by a new subsidiary called SB Northstar.

SoftBank’s shares fell 4.7% in Tokyo on Tuesday, after the rally in global stocks stalled amid concerns about a smaller U.S. fiscal stimulus package, still surging coronavirus cases and legal challenges to the U.S. election outcome. Tech shares were particularly hit by the news of a coronavirus shot that prevented over 90% of infections. Zoom plunged 17% while shares of Netflix Inc., another SoftBank investment, slid 9%.

The Japanese conglomerate said the fair value of its futures and options positions came to $2.7 billion at the end of September, including long call options on listed stocks worth $4.69 billion and short call options on listed stocks with negative $1.26 billion of value.

Son defended the program on Monday as a way to put to use SoftBank’s massive cash pile. Besides, the derivative bets are “a rounding error” relative to the company’s shareholdings, Son said repeatedly on the Monday call. The options account for just 1.2% of the SoftBank’s $292 billion of shareholdings.

“It is more meaningful when measured against market cap,” which put the exposure at 3%, Kirk Boodry, an analyst at Redex Research in Tokyo, wrote in a report. “With the next portfolio update not coming until February it is understandable why the discount to fair value remains wide.”

SoftBank is using stocks in its portfolio to help fund the trading operation. Northstar borrowed $6 billion in October with Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. shares pledged as collateral, the company disclosed with earnings.

Analysts questioned why SoftBank is betting on public stocks at all. Why is SoftBank, known for its long-term technology investments, is dabbling in something so short term, one caller asked.

“If there is spaghetti, this is the spice,” Son answered.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.