SoftBank IPO's Weak Debut Is Still a Win for Masayoshi Son
SoftBank IPO's Weak Debut Is Still a Win for Masayoshi Son · Bloomberg

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(Bloomberg) -- Masayoshi Son raised 2.65 trillion yen ($23.6 billion) by pulling off the world’s second-largest initial public offering ever. Investors weren’t so lucky.

SoftBank Corp., the Japanese telecommunications business of the billionaire’s technology empire, fell 7 percent to 1,192 yen just after the open in Tokyo on Thursday, hurt by concerns over an impending price war that could hit profits. That follows a 14.5 percent drop on the first day of trading a day earlier, which marked the biggest decline for a major IPO since Japan Display Inc.’s flop in 2014.

“A concern is how secure this dividend is,” Pelham Smithers, whose London-based firm offers equity research on Asian technology companies, wrote in a note to clients. “The problem would come if there is a genuine price war.”

The IPO was a victory for Son, who is amassing more cash to bet on new enterprises even in the middle of the Topix stock index’s worst year since 2011. A network outage just before the sale spooked investors, as did Rakuten Inc.’s planned entry into Japan’s 7 trillion yen wireless market. Of those who bought at the offered price of 1,500 yen, 90 percent were individuals; the rest were money managers. The stock is down more than 20 percent from that price.

By getting individuals to buy into the offering with an attractive yield, Son was able to raise funds even though future profitability remains a big question, according to Chris Lane, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co.

“The backdrop is incredibly negative. To sell something with a price at this level is converting lead into gold,” Lane said. “Like in all transactions, there is a buyer and a seller. In this case, SoftBank Group is the seller and I think that they have sold well.”

That was reflected in the shares of SoftBank Group Corp., which still holds about two-thirds of the domestic phone unit and saw its shares decline by less than 1 percent on Wednesday. Cash from the IPO will give Son the ability to make further investments in global technology companies through the $100 billion Vision fund, a portfolio that already includes Uber Technologies Inc. and WeWork Cos.

Still, the decline in the new SoftBank listing puts it just behind Japan Display’s weak market debut in 2014, Japan’s worst major IPO in at least a decade. It was clear from the beginning that SoftBank and its underwriters — Nomura Holdings Inc., Deutsche Bank AG, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group Inc., Mizuho Financial Group Inc. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. — were determined to pull off the IPO at a high price.