This week presented a study in contrasts for SoftBank Group, as a landmark portfolio company debut on Wall Street was juxtaposed against escalating investor anxiety over the conglomerate’s strategic direction and financial health.
Credit Market Jitters Intensify
Even as one of its holdings celebrated a public offering, SoftBank itself faced growing scrutiny from credit analysts. The cost to insure against a default on SoftBank’s debt, as measured by five-year credit default swaps (CDS), has widened to approximately 355 basis points. This marks an eleven-month high and represents the widest spread among major Japanese corporations, sitting about 100 basis points above that of Nissan.
The negative sentiment was further cemented by S&P Global Ratings, which revised its outlook on SoftBank to negative. The rating agency cited concerns that the restoration of liquidity and portfolio quality could take longer than anticipated, a warning triggered by SoftBank’s announcement of an additional $30 billion investment in OpenAI.
Financial analysts at Jefferies downgraded SoftBank’s stock to Underperform, pointing to concentrated investment risks and the escalating financial commitment to the artificial intelligence leader. Their analysis raised a specific concern: SoftBank has provided the majority of capital in several recent OpenAI funding rounds, a practice that could potentially inflate the reported valuations and, by extension, SoftBank’s own net asset value.
PayPay’s Successful U.S. Listing
In a significant bright spot, PayPay Corp., a SoftBank-backed fintech, made a robust entry onto the public markets. Shares in the digital payments firm opened at $18.16 on Thursday, a 14% premium to its initial public offering (IPO) price of $16. The listing raised $879.8 million, granting PayPay a market valuation of $12.1 billion.
This debut stands as the largest U.S. listing by a Japanese company in ten years and marks the first major U.S. IPO of a SoftBank-controlled entity since Arm Holdings in 2023. Investor demand was substantial, with the order book oversubscribed by more than five times. Anchor investors included the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, a unit of the Qatar Investment Authority, and Visa, which collectively committed up to $220 million. Participation also came from Tencent, Alipay, and Alphabet, Google’s parent company.
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The offering did require a concession on pricing. Initially targeting a range between $17 and $20 per share, geopolitical tensions and market volatility ultimately pushed the final IPO price down to $16. Following this pricing news, SoftBank’s own shares declined by approximately 4% on March 12.
Strategic Crossroads: OpenAI and Stargate
SoftBank’s total commitment to OpenAI now reaches $41 billion, comprising $30 billion from its Vision Fund and $11 billion from co-investors. This stake equates to roughly an 11% ownership in the AI firm. Jefferies indicated that its negative assessment could be revisited if OpenAI achieves a public listing at a valuation higher than its last private round, or if it attracts significant new external capital.
However, a separate cloud was cast on SoftBank’s AI infrastructure ambitions. Plans for a major AI data center in Texas, part of the collaborative “Stargate” project involving Oracle and OpenAI, were reportedly scrapped. In reaction, SoftBank’s stock temporarily fell as much as 12.5% to its lowest level since August 2025. Analysts at Bloomberg Intelligence noted that the development leaves SoftBank’s data center strategy “in limbo.”
A Steadying Force and the Road Ahead
Amidst the volatility, SoftBank’s domestic telecommunications unit, SoftBank Corp., provides a foundation of stability. For the first nine months of the fiscal year 2025, the subsidiary reported an 8% increase in revenue to a record 5.2 trillion yen. Its operating profit also grew by 8%, reaching 884 billion yen. The company subsequently raised its full-year revenue forecast to 6.95 trillion yen and its operating income target to 1.02 trillion yen.
The successful monetization of PayPay demonstrates SoftBank’s continued ability to realize value from its portfolio, even in turbulent market conditions. Whether this can serve as a template for further asset sales and alleviate credit rating pressures will largely depend on the trajectory of its massive OpenAI investment in the coming months—and if the broader Stargate vision can move beyond announcements into tangible reality.
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