BUS-181219-SOFTBANK-LISTING-(Read-Only)
SoftBank Corp. President and CEO Ken Miyauchi. Image Credit: Reuters

Tokyo. A handful of executives at SoftBank Group Corp are weighing the idea of an initial public offering for its Vision Fund, the $100 billion behemoth that has invested in technology companies ranging from Uber Technologies Inc to WeWork Cos.

The idea is early stage, said a person familiar with the situation who asked not to be identified because it was private. If pursued, an IPO would give investors in the fund a way to cash out part or all of their stakes. The fund might consider a direct listing rather than a traditional IPO, the person said.

A listing of any sort would be unusual for a venture firm, but the Vision Fund has operated outside of traditional venture parameters since its debut in 2016. It dwarfs other funds in size and invests more broadly than most venture funds, including in mature companies like chipmaker Nvidia Corp.

The Vision Fund has explored raising an additional $15 billion to keep funding its ambitious investment activities. SoftBank is planning a second Vision Fund, and is also launching a Latin American fund in the mold of Vision Fund.

A representative for SoftBank declined to comment. Discussions about a potential Vision Fund IPO were reported earlier by the Wall Street Journal.

The Vision Fund’s largest investor is Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund, which came under fire last year when the country’s crown prince was accused of involvement in the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Turkey. Other investors include Mubadala Investment Co., Abu Dhabi’s strategic investment fund.

The Vision Fund owns a 16.3 per cent stake in Uber, which is set to list next week on the New York Stock Exchange. It also has a stake in Slack Technologies Inc, which like Uber and WeWork, is planning to go public.

SoftBank Chief Executive Officer Masayoshi Son said in a Bloomberg BusinessWeek interview last year that he planned to raise $100 billion every two to three years to create Vision Fund successors.