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Paul Singer's Elliott Management Sold SoftBank Stake Amid Tech Selloff; Built Higher Stake In Toshiba

Benzinga Real-time News ·  Aug 16, 2022 08:38

Hedge fund Elliott Management dumped almost all of its position in Softbank Group Corp (OTC: SFTBY) earlier this year during the meltdown, the Financial Times reports.

Elliott lost conviction in the founder Masayoshi Son and his ability to close the considerable gap between the value of SoftBank's various holdings and its market capitalization.

Elliott was disappointed over the lack of share buybacks on Son's part. Instead, Son had opted to keep plowing billions of dollars into early-stage start-ups, to Eliott's dismay.

Soon after, SoftBank's share price crashed at the peak of concerns over the pandemic in March 2020. Elliott discussed taking SoftBank private. However, SoftBank instead launched a $41 billion plan to dispose of assets and a $23 billion share buyback. 

In 2020 reports suggested Elliott had built a $2.5 billion stake in SoftBank. Elliott increased its investment around the time when SoftBank's shares plunged.

In 2021, Elliott sold a significant chunk of these shares at a profit, FT writes. SoftBank London office head Gordon Singer headed Elliott's investment. He was the son of its founder Paul Singer.

Nabeel Bhanji also helmed SoftBank's London office. Bhanji focused on Toshiba Corp (OTC: TOSYY), where Elliott has built a more significant stake. Bhanji joined the board of Toshiba in June. 

SoftBank reported a record quarterly loss of $23 billion last week, with Son saying he was "ashamed" of past glee over the group's performance.

Analysts expected SoftBank to reconsider a management buyout following the dismal earnings.

SoftBank aimed to post a 4.6 trillion yen ($34.1 billion) gain from settling forward contracts for Alibaba Group Holding Limited (NYSE: BABA).

Price Action: SFTBY shares traded at $22.14 in the premarket on the last check Tuesday.

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