‘SoftBank is the Berkshire Hathaway of technology’

epa06161553 A Buddhist priest talks to Pepper, a robot developed by SoftBank Corp., after a demonstration of funeral ceremony with a Buddhist priest at the Tokyo International Funeral and Cemetery Show 2017 held at Tokyo Big Sight in Tokyo, Japan, 25 August 2017. The show is held 23-25 August 2017 with over 300 companies and shops in the industry. Over 17,000 people visited the shows for the first two days.  EPA-EFE/KIMIMASA MAYAMA

Bloomberg

Is Masayoshi Son the next Warren Buffett? A note from Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. argues that Son’s SoftBank Group Corp. is the next Berkshire Hathaway Inc.
“We like to think of SoftBank as a tech-focused Berkshire Hathaway,” analyst Chris Lane wrote, noting that investor returns have been similarly strong. In fact, Lane finds a lot that the Japanese and US firms have in common.
For starters, both are hard to define, Lane writes. SoftBank uses cash from its core telecommunications operations to invest in companies positioning to be part of the future—like e-commerce, microprocessor designs and robotics. And there’s not much synergy between many of its units, Lane notes. Sound familiar? Berkshire leverages the cash from its insurance firm to invest into other businesses. Buffett’s company started out in the textile milling industry, but what does that have to do with NetJets Inc. or Coca-Cola Co., two of Berkshire’s most notable investments? “The core business is ‘value investing,’ not insurance,” Lane wrote. “SoftBank’s core business is ‘tech investing.”’
Here’s where the two start to diverge: Son is beating Buffett at his own game, Lane says.
Going back 10 years, investing in Berkshire would have netted returns of more than 120 percent. In that same time frame, an investment in SoftBank would have gotten you more than 300 percent. That track record extends to comparing the stocks to their respective benchmarks. Lane points out that from 2001 until now, Berkshire has outperformed the Dow Jones Industrial Average by 175 percent, while SoftBank has outperformed the Nikkei by 540 percent. But when it comes to popular investment measures like price-to-earnings ratio, SoftBank is still trading at a big discount to Berkshire.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend