Tuesday 30 Apr 2024
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TOKYO (March 30): Softbank Group said on Thursday (March 30) it would recognise a 359.6 billion yen (RM11.9 billion) gain from the transfer of a stake in Alibaba Group Holdings to a wholly-owned subsidiary called Shiodome Project 17 GK.

Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba's shares jumped on Wednesday after it said it would split into six units and explore fundraisings or listings for most of them, marking the biggest restructuring in its 24-year history.

SoftBank said the transfer of 178.7 million Alibaba shares from the group holding company was to "improve management efficiency through the centralised management of these shares, in light of the potential to use them for financing in the future."

The Japanese investment conglomerate, led by Masayoshi Son, did not elabourate on the purpose of the potential financing. SoftBank has a 13.7% stake in Alibaba.

SoftBank said in a statement that the gain on the sale of investment securities included a gain of 117.1 billion yen related to a prepaid forward contract that was settled in October 2022 and had been previously deferred.

It booked a gain of US$34 billion last year by cutting its stake in Alibaba, as the firm sought to shore up its cash reserve amid steep losses incurred by its Vision Fund unit.

Son bought into Alibaba for US$20 million in 2000 and the Chinese firm's growth to become one of the world's biggest e-commerce companies helped burnish his tech investor credentials.

But Alibaba has lost more than two-thirds of its value from highs in late 2020, hit by Beijing's crackdown on the tech sector that included a hefty fine on Alibaba and scrutiny of founder Jack Ma's business empire.

Shares in SoftBank closed down 2% on Thursday prior to the announcement, lagging a 0.4% drop in the broader market.

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