logo
SoftBank shares surge to record high after optimism for AI prospects boosted Q1 earnings

SoftBank shares surge to record high after optimism for AI prospects boosted Q1 earnings

Time of India13 hours ago
Academy
Empower your mind, elevate your skills
Shares in SoftBank Group jumped more than 13% to a record high on Friday morning in a show of investor support for the Japanese technology investor's AI push after first quarter profit beat expectations.SoftBank's share price hit 14,205 yen at the close of morning trading.SoftBank has announced a series of mammoth investments this year, including committing $30 billion to ChatGPT maker OpenAI, as well as leading the financing for Stargate - a $500 billion data centre project in the United States.The firm beat analysts' expectations to report a net profit of 421.8 billion yen ($2.87 billion) for the April-June quarter, compared to a loss in the same period a year ago.Market enthusiasm for AI-related companies also pushed up valuations for its portfolio of listed and unlisted technology companies such that SoftBank's loan to value ratio improved to 17% at the end of June compared to 18% at the end of March.The results were "evidence of SoftBank's quality diversified portfolio, strong underlying fundamentals, thematic/secular tailwinds for its equity holdings, and the resilience of its balance sheet," Macquarie analyst Paul Golding wrote in a note.SoftBank was the biggest contributor to gains for Japan's Topix index, which rose some 1.5% to trade above the 3,000 point mark for the first time in its history.The jump will provide some relief to SoftBank investors as its shares have traded at a more than 50% discount to the value of its assets over the past five quarters."Active investors scooped up SoftBank Group shares to beat the Topix's gain," said Seiichi Suzuki, chief equity market analyst at Tokai Tokyo Research Institute."When the main indexes rise, they need to buy heavyweights that are rising. SoftBank's strong earnings and the Topix's gains came at the same time."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sam Altman slams companies for ‘going after shiny names' amid intense AI talent war. Says ‘thousands can do the same work'
Sam Altman slams companies for ‘going after shiny names' amid intense AI talent war. Says ‘thousands can do the same work'

Economic Times

time26 minutes ago

  • Economic Times

Sam Altman slams companies for ‘going after shiny names' amid intense AI talent war. Says ‘thousands can do the same work'

Synopsis OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says Silicon Valley's AI hiring frenzy is the most intense of his career, but warns companies are chasing 'shiny names' instead of untapped talent. With billion-dollar stakes in computing and infrastructure, Altman argues innovation will come from thousands worldwide, not just a select few — despite fierce poaching and sky-high offers. Agencies The AI talent war is heating up, with Meta and others offering sky-high pay to lure elite researchers. But OpenAI's Sam Altman warns that chasing 'shiny names' over untapped talent could be a costly mistake. The race to secure the world's brightest artificial intelligence minds has turned into one of Silicon Valley's most expensive battles — but according to OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, some companies are chasing prestige over potential. Speaking to CNBC's Squawk Box , Altman described the current hiring climate as 'the most intense talent market I have seen in my career.' Rival firms, particularly Meta, have been offering massive pay packages in an effort to lure top engineers away from competitors. Reports suggest these offers can stretch into the tens of millions, with some signing bonuses hitting nine figures. Yet Altman is skeptical of the industry's fixation on a small circle of well-known researchers. 'Some companies have decided to go after a few shiny names,' he said. 'But I think there are many thousands of people we could find, and probably tens or hundreds of thousands around the world capable of doing this kind of work.' The bidding war is being fueled by the enormous economic potential AI experts can unlock. OpenAI and other industry leaders are spending billions on computing power and infrastructure, creating a scenario where a single breakthrough could justify years of investment. When asked about the tiny elite capable of advancing AI to superintelligence, Altman admitted there is a 'medium-sized handful' of people who might be able to uncover the critical algorithmic breakthroughs needed. But he insists that innovation will not be driven solely by a select few — and that overlooking the wider talent pool is a strategic misstep. Altman's remarks come as Meta and xAI double down on their recruitment drive. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has built a new 'Superintelligence Lab,' poaching high-profile researchers from OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and Anthropic. Former Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang now serves as Meta's Chief AI Officer, while ex-GitHub CEO Nat Friedman has joined the effort. OpenAI has fought to keep its top people, reportedly revising compensation to match Meta's offers and relying on its mission-driven culture as a retention tool. Meta, meanwhile, has framed its advantage as a mix of vast compute resources, global reach, and a bold, open-source approach. The conversation around AI talent has also been colored by Altman's long-running feud with Elon Musk, his former OpenAI co-founder. After Microsoft announced that OpenAI's latest model, GPT-5, will be integrated into products like Microsoft 365 Copilot and GitHub Copilot, Musk quipped on X that 'OpenAI is going to eat Microsoft alive.' Altman brushed off the comment in his CNBC interview. 'I don't think about him that much,' he said, questioning the intent behind Musk's frequent criticism of OpenAI. The rivalry traces back to a philosophical split over the company's mission and Musk's failed attempt earlier this year to acquire OpenAI's controlling nonprofit. Amid speculation about an OpenAI IPO, Altman told Squawk Box that going public is not a priority. Valued at up to $500 billion, the company remains privately held with Microsoft as a major backer. Altman cited operational challenges and a desire to keep investing heavily in compute and research as reasons to avoid public markets for now. 'I hate that people get pushed to various degrees of sketchy ways to try to get exposure [to OpenAI],' he said, referring to private market trades of company shares. 'Whenever we do go public — if we ever go public — I think there will be tremendous upside left in front of the company.'

India's forex reserves tumble most in 2025 as RBI steps in to stem rupee slide
India's forex reserves tumble most in 2025 as RBI steps in to stem rupee slide

Time of India

time37 minutes ago

  • Time of India

India's forex reserves tumble most in 2025 as RBI steps in to stem rupee slide

India's foreign exchange reserves posted their sharpest weekly decline in 2025, as the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) likely intensified efforts to curb the rupee's slide against the dollar amid mounting trade tensions between New Delhi and Washington. India's foreign exchange fell by $9.3 billion in the week ending August 1, the steepest since mid-November, RBI data published Friday showed. Total foreign exchange reserves stood at $688.9 billion as on August 1, down from all-time high of $704.89 billion reported in end-September 2024. At the current level, reserves are sufficient to cover more than 11 months of merchandise imports. The data for weekly fall in FX reserves coincides with the US President Donald Trump's July 30 announcement of imposing 25% tariff on Indian exports to the US. This led to a fall in the rupee, which closed at a record low against the dollar the next day. This week Trump slapped an additional 25% tariffs, effectively raising total US duties to 50%, because of India's continued imports of Russian oil. Outflows from local equity markets have also kept the rupee under pressure. According to Gaura Sengupta, chief economist, at IDFC First Bank , out of the total weekly fall, around $6.9 billion was account of the RBI's intervention, where it net sold dollars and $2.1 is due to revaluation loss because dollar had strengthened in that period. 'The RBI's intervention had seen through July and even in August given the pressure on the currency because of tariffs. The data for the next week (August 8) is also expected to show a fall because of the intervention as well as maturity of $5 billion dollar-rupee swaps,' she said. The RBI stated stance has been that it intervenes only to maintain orderly market conditions by containing excessive volatility in the exchange rate. Foreign currency assets, which form over 84% of the total reserves, fell by over $7 billion. These assets are maintained as a multi-currency portfolio comprising major currencies, such as, US dollar, Euro, Pound sterling, Japanese yen, etc but expressed in dollar terms.

Ex-Google boss reveals how long we have to wait until AI's real benefits arrive. Warns of an unavoidable dystopia first
Ex-Google boss reveals how long we have to wait until AI's real benefits arrive. Warns of an unavoidable dystopia first

Economic Times

timean hour ago

  • Economic Times

Ex-Google boss reveals how long we have to wait until AI's real benefits arrive. Warns of an unavoidable dystopia first

A Countdown to 2027: When the Storm Begins The Real Threat Isn't the Machines Why the Next 15 Years Could Be the Hardest in Human History A Utopia on the Other Side? A former top Google leader has sounded an unsettling alarm about the near future, predicting that artificial intelligence will plunge the world into a decade-and-a-half of turmoil before humanity can emerge into anything resembling a warning comes from Mo Gawdat , the former Chief Business Officer at Google X , who spoke candidly on the Diary of a CEO podcast. His forecast is anything but rosy — and it's not the robots themselves we should believes the tipping point is just around the corner.'We will have to prepare for a world that is very unfamiliar,' he told host Steven Bartlett. 'We are going to hit a short-term dystopia — there's no escaping that.'According to him, the shift will begin in 2027, with a rough 12–15 year stretch where the darker side of human behavior, amplified by AI, will dominate. While early signs could emerge as soon as next year, the full impact will hit when powerful AI tools become commonplace in the wrong to popular sci-fi fears, Gawdat does not envision AI 'taking over' in a sentient, hostile way. Instead, his concern lies in how people will use these powerful tools. He warns that the 'failing morality of humanity' will lead to a surge in scams, privacy violations, and manipulation at unprecedented of the most troubling side effects he predicts is a 'massive concentration of power' in the hands of a select few — echoing similar warnings from AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton, who has raised alarms about widening inequality driven by AI's economic forecast paints a picture of societies struggling to adapt, where governance and ethical safeguards lag far behind technological such an environment, the potential for abuse skyrockets — from deepfake-driven disinformation campaigns to automated financial fraud, and from hyper-personalized propaganda to manipulation of democratic Gawdat's prediction is not entirely bleak. He sees this 'short-term dystopia' as a turbulent passage to what he calls a 'long-term utopia' — a world where AI fulfills its positive humanity can survive the next decade and a half of chaos, he suggests we might emerge into an era of abundance, efficiency, and unprecedented problem-solving optimists like Bill Gates share this latter vision, pointing to AI's potential to cut workloads, accelerate medical breakthroughs, and expand access to education. But as Gawdat warns, the path there will test our resilience, ethics, and adaptability like never before.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store