US hedge fund Tiger Global has built a stake worth over $1bn in SoftBank Group Corp as it considers the Japanese firm undervalued, a source with direct knowledge of the matter said, driving SoftBank shares up as much as 6.8%.
The bump added nearly $6bn to SoftBank’s market capitalisation, narrowing the gap between the company’s limited valuation as a conglomerate and the valuation that the company says it deserves, thanks to its rich investments.
The Japanese tech and telecoms firm, which holds a nearly 30% stake in Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, has recently started taking action to address the issue, including preparing a listing of its domestic telecoms unit.
New York-based Tiger Global, which manages around $22bn in assets, told investors in a letter that SoftBank’s stock price had not increased over the last five years even though its holding in Alibaba had added more than $90bn in value.
SoftBank shares surged as much as 6.8%, pushing up the company’s market value to about $91bn.
They closed up 6.4% at ¥9,376, their tenth consecutive day of gains.
The company’s charismatic CEO Masayoshi Son, who owns 21% of SoftBank, said at a shareholders’ meeting last month, that a “conglomerate discount” was weighing on the company’s stock.
He said the stock should be trading above 14,000 yen rather than where they were then – at around ¥8,000 – to account for its investments.
Besides Alibaba, SoftBank has a stake in US telecoms firm Sprint Corp and Yahoo Japan.
But SoftBank’s investments have left it with a heavy debt load.
It had about $123bn of debt as of March end and has a debt-to-equity ratio of 3.97, compared with an industry median of 0.10.
In contrast, Alibaba, whose shares have more than doubled since their debut in 2014, has a market capitalisation of $480bn and a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.31.
Sentiment towards the stock has risen recently after the company applied for the listing of its telecom unit and said it was increasing its stake in Yahoo Japan through an indirect deal that will deepen its ties with the internet heavyweight ahead of the IPO.
SoftBank hopes the listing will clarify the distinction between its domestic telecoms operations and investing activities and help chip away at its discounted valuation.Besides the cheap valuation, Tiger Global based its SoftBank investment decision on SoftBank’s purchase of US investment group Fortress and the launch of its near-$100bn Vision Fund to find and grow promising technology leaders.
Tiger Global and SoftBank have often invested in the same companies: ride-hailing firms Uber and India’s Ola.
SoftBank also bought most of Tiger’s stake in Indian e-commerce firm Flipkart Group earlier this year. “We continue to believe the market significantly undervalues our stock and we welcome the support from a sophisticated institutional investor like Tiger Global,” SoftBank said in an e-mail to Reuters yesterday.
Tiger Global was not available for comment outside regular US business hours.
But Tiger’s is not the only big bet on the Japanese company recently.
Los Angeles-based investment firm Capital Research increased its holdings in SoftBank to more than 36mn shares from 4mn as per a June 15 filing, forking out more than $2bn for the stake, according to Reuters calculations.