SoftBank Son is the founder, CEO and largest shareholder of SoftBank; as of December 2022, he had a 34.2 per cent stake in the company. He founded the company in 1981 as a software distributor and a publisher of computer-related literature.
SoftBank Corp. Son was the CEO of SoftBank Corp., the mobile business of
SoftBank Group, until 2021.
Yahoo! and Alibaba Son was an early investor in internet firms, buying a share of
Yahoo! in 1995 and investing a $20 million stake into
Alibaba in 1999; he was briefly the richest person in the world before the stock market crashed. Son's holding company
SoftBank owned 29.5% of
Alibaba, which was worth around $108.7 billion as of 23 October 2018. Although SoftBank's stake in Yahoo! had dwindled to 7%, Son established Yahoo! BroadBand in September 2001 with
Yahoo! Japan in which he still owned a controlling interest. After a severe devaluation of SoftBank's equity, Son was forced to focus his attention on Yahoo! BB and BB Phone. So far, SoftBank has accumulated about $1.3 billion in debt. Yet, Yahoo! BB acquired
Japan Telecom, the then third largest broadband and landline provider with 600,000 residential and 170,000 commercial subscribers. Yahoo! BB is now Japan's leading broadband provider. In June 2020, Son stepped down from the Alibaba board. By 2023, SoftBank had sold most of its Alibaba stake.
Arm Holdings In July 2016, immediately following the UK's
Brexit referendum, SoftBank announced plans to acquire
Arm Holdings for £23.4 billion ($31.4 billion) which would be the largest ever purchase of a European technology company. In September 2016, SoftBank announced that the transaction was complete. The total acquisition price was approximately £24 billion ($34 billion). However, the deal with Nvidia failed as announced in February 2022. After the collapse of the deal with Nvidia because of objections from
U.S. and
EU antitrust regulators, SoftBank Group Corp.'s chip maker Arm filed in 2023 with regulators confidentially for a U.S. stock market listing seeking to raise between $8 billion and $10 billion. The estimated value of the UK chipmaker being listed by SoftBank at that date ranged from $30bn to $70bn.
Sprint Corporation In the 2010s, through his holdings in SoftBank, Son bought a 76% share in
Sprint. SoftBank later accumulated further shares in Sprint to about 84% ownership.
Sprint and T-Mobile US merged in 2020 in an all-shares deal for $26 billion. By 2021, SoftBank Group Corp. had acquired 4.5% of
Deutsche Telekom AG (parent company of T-Mobile) and sold its stake in T-Mobile US Inc. to the German telecommunications carrier.
Solar power In response to the
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in 2011, Masayoshi Son criticized the nuclear industry for creating "the problem that worries Japanese the most today" and engaged in investing in a nationwide
solar power network for Japan. In March 2018, it was announced that Son was investing in the biggest ever solar project, a 200GW development planned for Saudi Arabia as part of its
Vision 2030. In July 2018, coverage indicated that Son "would underwrite most of 100 GW" of a planned 275 GW of new renewable provision in India by 2027.
Vision Fund Established in 2017,
SoftBank Group's investment vehicle, the $100 billion
Vision Fund, was intended to invest in emerging technologies like artificial intelligence (AI), robotics and the
internet of things. As of 2019, it aimed to nearly double its portfolio of AI companies from 70 to 125. However, it also invested in companies supposedly focused on revolutionizing real estate, transportation, and retail. Son claimed he would make personal connections with the CEOs of all companies funded by Vision Fund in order to enhance the creation of intertwined synergies among those companies. Son planned to raise $100 billion for a new fund every few years, investing about $50 billion a year in startups. But the amount was scaled down due to lack of investing partners beyond SoftBank Group itself and Masayoshi Son. As of 2020, the first fund had invested in 88 companies including
Coupang,
Didi,
Doordash,
Fanatics,
Grab,
Oyo,
Paytm Uber, and
WeWork, but had experienced an awkward fall from grace as the
COVID-19 pandemic and a Chinese regulatory crackdown accelerated the exposure of the Japanese investment management conglomerate's portfolio weaknesses. Son became noted as a
stock investor after the meteoric rise of
Alibaba Group. He had invested $20 million in
Jack Ma's Alibaba back in 2000 when it was a young Chinese
startup company although regrettably passing up early opportunities to invest in both
Amazon and
Tesla. In addition, he raised his global profile as stock investor since starting SoftBank Vision Fund in 2017, creating an unprecedented investment vehicle of almost $100 billion to back technology startups. But by 2021, he was still struggling to persuade investors of the value of his efforts, in part because of major losses with companies such as
WeWork,
OneWeb,
Wirecard, OYO Rooms,
Katerra or
Greensill Capital, and SoftBank Group's own stock chronically traded far below the value of its assets reflecting a discount associated with tax liabilities, risk, past performance, losses, performance fees and high probability of occurrence of several
haircuts given Son's poor track record while running the Vision Fund and high enthusiasm for investing vast sums in loss-making companies at eye-popping valuations. By October 2021, Masayoshi Son had accelerated the pace of his startup investments quintupling the number of companies in his Vision Fund 2 portfolio in less than 9 months, SoftBank was cutting more deals with fewer staff than ever and the average investment amount per company had fallen from $943 million in Vision Fund 1 to $192 million in Vision Fund 2. In 2022, SoftBank Vision Fund posted a record 3.5 trillion yen loss ($27.4 billion) for its financial year ended on 31 March 2022 as the valuation of its stock portfolio plummeted. SoftBank's bad timing-prone, impulsive investment decisions regarding previously overhyped and consequently overvalued startups like
Klarna, had plunged in value while some other investment firms had even been able to cash in before the startups' comedown to reap hundreds of millions of dollars in profit. In August 2022, Masayoshi Son said he was "embarrassed" and "ashamed" when asked to talk about the way he had run the SoftBank Vision Fund and ''
Barron's characterized the fund as a "failed experiment" while The Wall Street Journal'' called SoftBank a "big loser" By November 2022, according to the
Financial Times, Masayoshi Son personally owed SoftBank $4.7bn because of growing losses on the Japanese conglomerate's technology bets, which have also rendered the value of his stake in the group's second Vision Fund worthless. By February 2023, this personal debt totaled $5.1 billion according to
Bloomberg calculations based on company disclosures. This debt on side deals he set up at SoftBank Group Corp. to boost his compensation, as losses mounted at its core Vision Fund venture capital arm
, sparked controversy due to corporate governance concerns, but Son insisted that there was no
conflict of interest. As of March 2023, while the
collapse of Silicon Valley Bank was being investigated, over a third of Son's SoftBank shares had been reportedly posted as collateral for margin loans and the Financial Times was recalling signs of an emergent doomsday scenario for both SoftBank Group and Masayoshi Son.
Stargate Son was named chairman of
The Stargate Project, an American artificial intelligence infrastructure joint venture formed by SoftBank,
OpenAI,
Oracle Corporation and
MGX, in January 2025.
Repositioning and AI-focused strategy (2023–2025) From 2023 onward,
SoftBank Group announced a strategic shift toward artificial intelligence infrastructure and
semiconductor-related investments. During this period, Son publicly stated that AI development would become the primary focus of the group’s future strategy. In 2024 and 2025,
SoftBank reported a return to profitability following earlier losses in the
Vision Fund segment.
Reuters reported that SoftBank’s net profit for the second quarter of fiscal year 2025 more than doubled to ¥2.5 trillion, supported in part by valuation gains related to AI-linked technology holdings. In January 2025, Son’s appointment as chairman of the artificial-intelligence infrastructure venture
Stargate LLC aligned with this broader strategic shift. SoftBank also carried out several restructuring measures during this period, including consolidations and selective divestments, which the company said were intended to strengthen liquidity and align with its AI-oriented strategy. == Personal life ==