SoftBank Sells $2 Billion in Uber Stock as Ride-Hailing Recovers
SoftBank Group Corp.’s Vision Fund traded about $2 billion in Uber Technologies Inc. stock after a rally in the ride-hailing giant’s shares, signalling it may cash in more gains from the sector in the future.
According to a filing with the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission, an affiliate of the investment fund, SB Cayman 2 sold 38 million shares at an average price of $53.46,.
SoftBank still holds about 184.2 million shares, according to the filing, worth about $10 billion at current prices.
Masayoshi Son, SoftBank founder, was an aggressive investor in the ride-hailing sector, taking major stakes in Uber, China’s Didi Chuxing, India’s Ola and Southeast Asia’s Grab. Those wagers looked in jeopardy when Uber stumbled after its 2019 initial public offering and the coronavirus pandemic slammed demand.
“SoftBank Vision Fund may pave the way for Didi Chuxing’s IPO after selling Uber shares,” Anthea Lai, Bloomberg Intelligence analyst, wrote in a research note. “As it reportedly owns about 20% of the Chinese company, paring down exposure to Uber could help relieve concerns by Didi’s prospective investors about Softbank’s heavy influence in the ride-sharing sector and potential conflict of interest.”
Uber Chief Executive Officer Dara Khosrowshahi initiated two rounds of layoffs and sliced pricey initiatives such as electric bikes and flying taxis. Covid-19 lockdowns continue to depress ride-sharing demand in the company’s largest markets, with sales in the U.S. and Canada down 30% during the third quarter.
But the food-delivery business has surged during the pandemic, making up for much of that loss. Management has suggested delivery could be as big as or bigger than ride-hailing once the pandemic passes. Uber has pledged to turn a quarterly adjusted profit by the end of this year.
SoftBank shares have also rallied as investments like Uber have recovered and several of its portfolio companies have gone public. Son has sold off assets to fund record buybacks of his own stock.
The Tokyo-based company is preparing to take at least six more of its portfolio companies this year, after a round of IPOs in 2020 produced big profits. Along with Didi, South Korean e-commerce pioneer Coupang Corp. and Indonesian online mall operator PT Tokopedia are angling for 2021 debuts, states the report.
Son’s company has about 100 startups in its portfolio, potential candidates for IPOs or acquisitions. SoftBank shares rose just less than 1% on Tuesday.
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