SoftBank reportedly plans to lend employees as much as $20 billion to invest in its VC fund
   Darrell Etherington @etherington / 9:59 am CDT  TechCrunch August 17, 2019
  SoftBank has a plant to loan up to $20 billion to its employees, including CEO  Masayoshi Son,  for the purposes of having that capital re-invested in SoftBank’s own Vision venture fund, according to a new report from the  Wall Street Journal. That’s a highly unusual move that could be risky in terms of how much exposure SoftBank Group has on the whole in terms of its startup bets, but the upside is that it can potentially fill out as much as a fifth of its newly announced second Vision Fund’s total target raise of $108 billion from a highly aligned investor pool.
  SoftBank revealed its plans for its second Vision Fund last month, including $38 billion from SoftBank itself, as well as commitments from  Apple,  Microsoft and more. The company also took a similar approach to its original Vision Fund, WSJ reports, with stakes from employees provided with loans totalling $8 billion of that $100 billion commitment.
  The potential pay-off is big, provided the fund has some solid winners that achieve liquidation events that provide big returns that employees can then use to pay off the original loans, walking away with profit. That’s definitely a risk, however, especially in the current global economic client. As WSJ notes, the  Uber  shares that Vision Fund I acquired are now worth less than what SoftBank originally paid for them according to sources, and SoftBank bet WeWork looks poised to be another company whose IPO might not make that much, if any, money for later stage investors.
  techcrunch.com |