SoftBank to retire treasury shares after group's largest-ever buyback

Published Wed, Apr 28, 2021 · 07:47 AM

    [TOKYO] SoftBank Group said on Wednesday it would retire treasury shares worth 16.3 per cent of its outstanding stock after the group's largest-ever buyback swelled its holdings.

    The cancellation will leave the investment conglomerate holding as treasury stock 0.6 per cent of total shares issued.

    The move is "probably not a signal either way on future buybacks", said analyst Kirk Boodry at Redex Research, adding it is in line with industry practice.

    SoftBank has spent more than 2.2 trillion yen (S$26.77 billion) on buybacks since March last year, largely completing its buyback programme.

    It launched the programme after a series of missteps forced the group to sell down assets to support its share price.

    SoftBank's US$100 billion Vision Fund is widely expected to post its largest-ever quarterly profit on May 12 with the listing of portfolio company Coupang driving gains.

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    The cancellation of treasury shares will boost the ownership of its top shareholder, founder and chief executive Masayoshi Son, who holds a 25 per cent stake.

    The largest-ever gap between the value of SoftBank's assets and its share price last March led to debate over taking the group private before buybacks drove a recovery in the stock price.

    SoftBank's shares are trading 7 per cent down from two-decade highs hit last month.

    REUTERS

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