Here is a Bloomberg story on Softbank, which has seen better days. Their stock has swooned lately, and they may be in some financial trouble. Whether this has any bearing on what is going on with AOL/NTOP/IDTC or not, I don't know.
Softbank Says Undecided on Whether to Sell Shares as Stock Extends Slide By Jason Singer and Mari Murayama
Softbank Says Undecided on Whether to Sell New Shares (Update2)
(Adds new analyst comment in fourth and eleventh paragraphs.)
Tokyo, March 27 (Bloomberg) -- Softbank Corp., the Internet investor whose shares have fallen 35 percent in less than a week, said its board has not decided whether to sell new shares to raise funds.
The statement comes after conflicting reports over the weekend questioned whether the company's board had decided to hold off on a reported plan to sell 300 billion yen ($2.8 billion) in new shares by the end of April.
Investors have speculated Softbank is looking to raise money to help fund its investments in fledgling Internet startups. At the same time, analysts say financial markets may be souring on the company's strategy of boosting its own market capitalization based on expectations of future profit from its holdings in Internet-related companies. ``Softbank's management is thought to be facing a turning point,' said Yasuo Imanaka, an analyst at Commerz Securities (Japan) Co., in a report. Imanaka today lowered his rating on Softbank to ``hold' from ``buy,' citing ``a variety of risks' which may prevent the company from meeting its need for cash.
A Softbank spokeswoman, who did not want to be named, said she did not know whether the share sale was discussed at a board meeting Friday, adding the company ``at this point' has not made any official decision whether to carry out the plan.
Softbank shares fell as much as 14 percent Friday after the Nihon Keizai newspaper reported, without citing sources, that the Internet investor would go ahead with the share offering.
Softbank's shares fell 5,500 yen, or 6.3 percent, to 81,500 yen. The shares had been up as much as 4.9 percent in early trade after the Nikkei reported the company's board had decided against the sale.
Opportunities
``I assume they need to raise money because there are tons of opportunities coming,' said Cairan Casey, portfolio manager for Japanese equities at State Street Global Advisors in Tokyo, which owns a 2.7 percent stake in Softbank mainly on behalf of other investors. Still, the reported share sale may ``not be a good move considering where its stock price is right now. There's the margin overhang, where a lot of investors are getting squeezed out of the market on call margins.'
Though investors say the likelihood of a share offering is now in doubt, they remain certain the company will stick to its investment strategy. Billionaire Masayoshi Son, whose Tokyo-based holding company makes announcements almost daily of partnerships with Internet plays, has made no secret of his intentions.
In late February, Softbank obtained the go-ahead from the Japanese government to take over the government-controlled Nippon Credit Bank Ltd, in cooperation with Orix Corp., Japan's largest nonbank financial company, and Tokyo Marine & Fire Insurance Co., the nation's largest non-life insurer. As well, earlier in the month, the company said it would triple the size of its planned venture fund to 150 billion yen to respond to investor interest. ``I think (investors) need to be cautious to some extent about the company's excessive capital investment and the move into banking operations,' Imanaka said in his report.
Psychology
Softbank's shares soared 14-fold last year on investor optimism its investments in Internet startups will begin to pay off. Still, the shares are down 16.7 percent since the beginning of January on concern Japan's biggest Internet investor may have overextended itself and on a glut of share offerings from Japanese technology companies. ``Investor psychology is now in a reverse cycle,' said Soichiro Fukuda, an analyst at IBJ Securities Co. ``Investors have rediscovered that the company needs a sizable amount of cash but has few units to generate it.'
Softbank over the past five years has invested $2 billion to build itself into one of the world's biggest supporters of Internet ventures, with stakes in companies such as Yahoo! Inc. and GeoCities.
The company said earlier this month it plans to invest as much as $5 billion in Internet ventures worldwide in the next 16 months and will join with partners to put more than $1 billion in Europe. Its expanded investment program is scheduled to unfold over the next 12 to 16 months.
Analysts have expressed concerned whether Softbank's share price is justified by the company's prospects. Goldman Sachs on March 8 lowered its target price to 185,000 yen from 240,000 yen, citing the change in the value of the company's venture capital business in Japan, though it left unchanged its ``buy' rating on the stock.
Cash Need
``They need cash for new investments,' said Laurent Halmos, a director at Credit Lyonnais International Asset Management (Japan) Ltd., which manages about $348 million in Japanese equities. Softbank may also be trying to reduce debt, he said.
The firm may also need the cash for pending acquisitions of Japanese financial companies or more Internet firms, said Makoto Ueno, an analyst at Daiwa Institute of Research Inc. The company may, however, find money managers willing to pass up the opportunity to acquire new Softbank shares, long the darling of Internet investors. ``Information and telecommunications stocks have lost momentum,' said Tatsuhiko Takura, general manager of investment research at Tokio Marine Asset Management Co., which holds Softbank shares as part of the 900 billion yen equity portfolio it manages for pension funds. |