October 10, 2025
1550 Bay st Ste. C242, San Francisco, CA 94123
Technology

SoftBank in Talks for $5 Billion Margin Loan Backed by Arm Stock

(Bloomberg) — SoftBank Group Corp. (9984.T, SFTBY, SFTBF) is in talks to borrow $5 billion from global banks, refilling its coffers at a time Masayoshi Son is accelerating the Japanese investment firm’s bets on artificial intelligence.

Most Read from Bloomberg

SoftBank is close to signing a deal with a handful of lenders for a margin loan secured by shares of its chip unit Arm Holdings Plc. (ARM), people familiar with the matter said. The capital will fund additional investment in OpenAI this year, the people said, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters.

A margin loan is a type of facility where you borrow money using your investments — like stocks — as collateral. A representative for SoftBank declined to comment.

Founder Son has embarked on a spending spree this year to try and position the firm as a linchpin in the global AI boom, most recently pledging as much as $30 billion toward OpenAI and buying ABB Ltd.’s robotics arm for $5.4 billion. Arm’s 38% rally this year has in turn granted SoftBank the confidence and leeway to grow its investment war chest.

SoftBank has raised a total of $13.5 billion in margin loans from Arm shares, with $5 billion still undrawn, as of March 2025, according to its earnings statement. The latest facility will increase the total to $18.5 billion.

The group had secured about $8 billion in margin loans ahead of Arm’s initial public offering in 2023. Eleven banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co., Barclays Plc, BNP Paribas SA, Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. provided the facilities by linking mandates for Arm’s IPO to the loans. Earlier this year, the group also raised a $15 billion one-year facility to help fund AI investments in the US, in what is among its largest borrowings raised.

Why Fears of a Trillion-Dollar AI Bubble Are Growing: QuickTake

Son’s insatiable appetite for deals has extended far and wide, centered on ideas to capitalize on the expected exponential growth of AI technologies.

His most ambitious projects include a $500 billion Stargate initiative that aims to build data centers across the US in partnership with OpenAI and Oracle Corp. SoftBank is also exploring the feasibility of a large-scale industrial manufacturing hub in the US, which could encompass production lines for AI-powered industrial robots, Bloomberg News has reported.

What Bloomberg Intelligence Says

SoftBank Group’s $5.4 billion acquisition of ABB’s robotics arm demonstrates the company’s large M&A appetite, raising credit and bond-supply risks. The company may hit its 25% loan-to-value limit with this deal, along with a $22.5 billion second-tranche investment in OpenAI, the purchase of Ampere Computing and its investment in Stargate, though tech stock values may provide some offset. Funding needs may exceed $30 billion, but asset sales and asset-backed financing could lower reliance on bond markets.

– Sharon Chen, analyst

Click here for the research.

SoftBank joins a wave of big tech firms and investors plowing unprecedented amounts of capital into a technology with the potential to transform industries and economies. But the flurry of deals and partnerships — many involving Nvidia Corp. and OpenAI — are escalating concerns that an increasingly complex and interconnected web of business transactions is artificially propping up the trillion-dollar AI boom.

The amount of debt tied to AI has ballooned to $1.2 trillion, making it the largest segment in the investment-grade market, JPMorgan estimates.

Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Sharon Chen estimates that SoftBank’s funding needs may exceed $30 billion, considering a pipeline of deals including a takeover of Ampere Computing Llc. Asset sales and asset-backed financing could lower reliance on bond markets, she wrote in a note Wednesday.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2025 Bloomberg L.P.



Source by [author_name]

(Bloomberg) — SoftBank Group Corp. (9984.T, SFTBY, SFTBF) is in talks to borrow $5 billion from global banks, refilling its coffers at a time Masayoshi Son is accelerating the Japanese investment firm’s bets on artificial intelligence.

Most Read from Bloomberg

SoftBank is close to signing a deal with a handful of lenders for a margin loan secured by shares of its chip unit Arm Holdings Plc. (ARM), people familiar with the matter said. The capital will fund additional investment in OpenAI this year, the people said, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters.

A margin loan is a type of facility where you borrow money using your investments — like stocks — as collateral. A representative for SoftBank declined to comment.

Founder Son has embarked on a spending spree this year to try and position the firm as a linchpin in the global AI boom, most recently pledging as much as $30 billion toward OpenAI and buying ABB Ltd.’s robotics arm for $5.4 billion. Arm’s 38% rally this year has in turn granted SoftBank the confidence and leeway to grow its investment war chest.

SoftBank has raised a total of $13.5 billion in margin loans from Arm shares, with $5 billion still undrawn, as of March 2025, according to its earnings statement. The latest facility will increase the total to $18.5 billion.

The group had secured about $8 billion in margin loans ahead of Arm’s initial public offering in 2023. Eleven banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co., Barclays Plc, BNP Paribas SA, Credit Agricole Corporate and Investment Bank and Goldman Sachs Group Inc. provided the facilities by linking mandates for Arm’s IPO to the loans. Earlier this year, the group also raised a $15 billion one-year facility to help fund AI investments in the US, in what is among its largest borrowings raised.

Why Fears of a Trillion-Dollar AI Bubble Are Growing: QuickTake

Son’s insatiable appetite for deals has extended far and wide, centered on ideas to capitalize on the expected exponential growth of AI technologies.

His most ambitious projects include a $500 billion Stargate initiative that aims to build data centers across the US in partnership with OpenAI and Oracle Corp. SoftBank is also exploring the feasibility of a large-scale industrial manufacturing hub in the US, which could encompass production lines for AI-powered industrial robots, Bloomberg News has reported.

What Bloomberg Intelligence Says

SoftBank Group’s $5.4 billion acquisition of ABB’s robotics arm demonstrates the company’s large M&A appetite, raising credit and bond-supply risks. The company may hit its 25% loan-to-value limit with this deal, along with a $22.5 billion second-tranche investment in OpenAI, the purchase of Ampere Computing and its investment in Stargate, though tech stock values may provide some offset. Funding needs may exceed $30 billion, but asset sales and asset-backed financing could lower reliance on bond markets.

– Sharon Chen, analyst

Click here for the research.

SoftBank joins a wave of big tech firms and investors plowing unprecedented amounts of capital into a technology with the potential to transform industries and economies. But the flurry of deals and partnerships — many involving Nvidia Corp. and OpenAI — are escalating concerns that an increasingly complex and interconnected web of business transactions is artificially propping up the trillion-dollar AI boom.

The amount of debt tied to AI has ballooned to $1.2 trillion, making it the largest segment in the investment-grade market, JPMorgan estimates.

Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Sharon Chen estimates that SoftBank’s funding needs may exceed $30 billion, considering a pipeline of deals including a takeover of Ampere Computing Llc. Asset sales and asset-backed financing could lower reliance on bond markets, she wrote in a note Wednesday.

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

Leave feedback about this

  • Quality
  • Price
  • Service

PROS

+
Add Field

CONS

+
Add Field
Choose Image
Choose Video
Music Festivals

Technology

Technology

Music Festivals

Technology

Music Festivals

Technology

Music Festivals

Technology

Music Festivals