SoftBank Net Profit Rises 19%
28 July 2016 - 5:30PM
Dow Jones News
TOKYO—SoftBank Group Corp.'s net profit for the fiscal first
quarter rose 19% in its first earnings report since the Japanese
company took the global semiconductor industry by surprise with a
$32 billion deal to acquire ARM Holdings PLC.
The telecommunications and internet conglomerate said its net
profit rose to ¥ 254 billion in the April-to-June quarter from ¥
213 billion a year earlier, while operating profit inched up 0.2%
to ¥ 319 billion and revenue rose 2.9% to ¥ 2.13 trillion. The
company didn't provide earnings forecasts.
SoftBank, which operates Japan's third-largest mobile carrier
and owns struggling U.S. wireless carrier Sprint Corp., struck a
deal earlier this month to buy U.K.-based chip designer ARM in a
bet on demand for internet connectivity in everyday devices such as
automobiles and refrigerators.
"I believe ARM will become most central to SoftBank's future
growth," Masayoshi Son, SoftBank's founder and chief executive,
said during an earnings briefing Thursday. Mr. Son said he would
devote around 45% of his time on turning around Sprint, another 45%
of his time on ARM, and the rest on other matters.
The acquisition of ARM was SoftBank's first major deal since
former Google executive Nikesh Arora, handpicked by Mr. Son to be
his successor, abruptly left the company last month.
It also came after SoftBank raised about $17 billion in asset
sales—including selling shares in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and
Finnish game maker Supercell Oy—funds that some analysts hoped
would be used to fix its balance sheet.
After the asset sales, SoftBank said it is saddled with around ¥
7.1 trillion in consolidated net debt, of which around ¥ 3.3
trillion is tied to Sprint, which SoftBank bought in 2013 for $22
billion.
Instead, the cash is going to pay for the purchase of ARM and
SoftBank will be taking on even more debt—around ¥ 1 trillion in
bridge loans—that will convert into longer-term financing. Mr. Son
has said the ARM deal reflects his confidence that the fortunes of
Sprint were turning around.
SoftBank has been cutting expenses to revive the No. 4 U.S.
mobile carrier.
Unlike Sprint, however, ARM is profitable. For 2015, ARM
reported revenue of $1.5 billion and profit of £ 340 million ($450
million).
ARM has recently devoted more of its resources to designing
chips for the Internet of Things, such as lightbulbs that will have
small chips in them that store information about energy use and
then transmit that data to the internet.
Mr. Son has depicted the acquisition as part of a broader
strategy to build artificial-intelligence functions into the kinds
of devices that carry ARM-designed chips.
Mr. Son's vision in these areas has already been in motion for
several years. In 2014, he introduced a humanlike robot named
Pepper that he said could sense human feelings. On Monday, SoftBank
said the robot will be available to corporate customers in Taiwan
through a subsidiary of Foxconn Technology Group, marking the first
time Pepper will be available outside Japan.
SoftBank also announced last week that it would work with Honda
Motor Co. to build cars that would learn to perceive drivers'
emotions from sensors and cameras, as well as from conversing with
the motorists.
Write to Alexander Martin at alexander.martin@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 28, 2016 03:15 ET (07:15 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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