SoftBank Group Corp. has sold its entire stake in Nvidia Corp. for $5.83 billion, marking another major move by founder Masayoshi Son to fund his growing ambitions in artificial intelligence. The sale underscores SoftBank’s shift toward becoming a central player in the AI ecosystem—one that spans data centers, chip design, robotics, and advanced cloud infrastructure.
The decision to sell Nvidia shares comes as global investors question whether massive AI spending—expected to exceed $1 trillion by companies like Meta Platforms and Alphabet—will produce long-term profits. Despite this uncertainty, Son continues to double down on AI, redirecting proceeds into projects such as Stargate, a mega data center venture being developed in collaboration with OpenAI and Oracle Corp.
SoftBank’s U.S.-listed shares rose more than 7% following the announcement, while Nvidia’s stock slipped over 3% during trading on Tuesday. The move illustrates the shifting balance of investor sentiment as capital flows from established AI leaders toward emerging infrastructure and hardware bets.
According to SoftBank executives, the Nvidia sale was not due to concerns about the chipmaker but rather a strategic move to free up capital. Chief Financial Officer Yoshimitsu Goto emphasized that the proceeds will be used to finance new AI initiatives, though he declined to comment on whether the sector is currently in a bubble.
This is not the first time SoftBank has exited Nvidia. The company sold its previous stake in 2019, only to re-enter the stock in 2020—just before Nvidia’s meteoric rise fueled by the AI boom. By March 2025, SoftBank had quietly accumulated a $3 billion position in Nvidia, which has since surged by more than $2 trillion in market value amid the global AI frenzy.
The timing of the sale proved highly profitable for SoftBank. The company recently reported a ¥2.5 trillion ($16.2 billion) net income for its fiscal second quarter, driven by its holdings in OpenAI, Arm Holdings, and other AI-focused firms. Analysts expect SoftBank to post its strongest annual profit since 2020, with the Nvidia sale adding significant liquidity to support its ongoing expansion.
Son’s AI roadmap is ambitious. In addition to the Stargate data center network, SoftBank is pursuing a $1 trillion AI manufacturing hub in Arizona, potential collaborations with Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC), and the acquisition of Ampere Computing LLC for $6.5 billion. The company has also agreed to purchase ABB Ltd.’s robotics division for $5.4 billion—moves that signal a vertically integrated AI empire in the making.
SoftBank’s financial strategy has been equally bold. It recently expanded its margin loan backed by Arm shares to $20 billion, secured an $8.5 billion bridge loan for its OpenAI investment, and committed the full $22.5 billion originally pledged to the AI startup.
The Japanese conglomerate’s stock has surged nearly 78% over the past quarter, its best performance in two decades. The company also announced a 4-for-1 stock split effective January 1, 2026, aimed at making its shares more accessible to retail investors.
As Son pushes deeper into the AI frontier, SoftBank’s latest divestment highlights both opportunity and risk. While the Nvidia exit frees billions for new ventures, it also removes exposure to one of the most successful AI chipmakers of the decade. Still, for Masayoshi Son, the message is clear: SoftBank’s future lies not in following AI’s leaders, but in building the infrastructure that powers them.