Japan's SoftBank Says It Could Invest as Much As $880 Billion in Tech (recode.net)
SoftBank could commit as much as $880 billion to tech investments in the coming years, a gargantuan, unprecedented amount of cash that would amount to a seismic shift in tech-sector finance. From a report: "The Vision Fund was just the first step, 10 trillion yen ($88 billion) is simply not enough," CEO Masayoshi Son said in an interview with The Nikkei Asian Review that was published late Thursday. "We will briskly expand the scale. Vision Funds 2, 3 and 4 will be established every two to three years." Son's comment confirms a Recode report that his Vision Fund -- which is sinking $100 billion into the technology sector worldwide -- was only the first in a series of investments that he plans to make in young companies. "We are creating a mechanism to increase our funding ability from 10 trillion yen to 20 trillion yen to 100 trillion yen," Son told the outlet. That comes out to about $880 billion. Companies that SoftBank either completely owns or has major or minor stakes in include Vodafone Japan, Yahoo! Japan, India's Snapdeal, India's Ola, Sprint Corporation, and India's Flipkart. The company is expected to become a major stake holder in Uber as soon as next week.
maybe they're just blowing smoke, but should one bank of a country that's been in recession have just shy of $1 trillion to throw around? It makes me wonder if the reason Japan's stuck in recession is that all the money's at the top.
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Bubbles implode.
Bubbles in the US economy repatriate money which the US trade deficit exports, when the bubble collapses the money stays in the US and the foreign countries can spend a while longer shipping goods to the US. If they invested all their US paper in near-guaranteed income assets like non leveraged real estate or secure but low yielding companies, the US would be in serious trouble (it would snowball and transfer ownership of the US economy abroad).
Bubbles are necessary for the status quo.
That report is in x million, not x thousand. Their total assets is 24 trillion yen, or ~217 billion USD. Comparing the year-over-years, it looks like their assets are increasing 40-50bn/yr on average. That doesn't really give a clear idea of income vs costs, but 880bn spread over multiple injections doesn't seem too far out of reality as long as they can keep running at that level.
Come on. You know you want to say it. "Thank You Trump!"
I read at +2. If your post doesn't reach that level I will not see or respond to it.