Over the last several weeks, SoftBank shares have plunged by about 40% from their late-October peak, a dramatic drop that wiped out more than ¥16 trillion (roughly US $102 billion) in market value.
The steep decline comes amid a broader global sell-off in AI-related stocks. In this climate, investors increasingly view SoftBank not just as a diversified conglomerate, but as a proxy for OpenAI, the private AI firm it has heavily backed.
The trigger for much of the panic appears to be growing unease over valuations and increasing competition in the AI space, especially from rivals like Alphabet Inc. (parent of Google), whose new AI model Gemini 3.0 has just debuted. That has raised concerns that OpenAI might lose its first-mover advantage, and by extension, that SoftBank’s massive bet on OpenAI might turn riskier.
SoftBank has surged as a leading investor in AI, and much of its recent success is tied to its exposure to OpenAI. According to the report, SoftBank’s gains on its OpenAI stake helped deliver a ¥2.5 trillion net income in its most recent fiscal second quarter, one of the strongest results the firm has recorded in recent years.
That “windfall” helped fuel optimism but also inflated the stock’s valuation, making SoftBank appear as though it was riding the AI boom directly. As long as investors believed AI valuations would keep climbing, SoftBank looked like a winner. Once doubts crept in about competition, profitability, and AI hype the reverse quickly happened.
Thus, many now treat SoftBank’s stock as a barometer for AI sentiment: when AI optimism is high, SoftBank rises; when fear or skepticism returns, it tumbles.
Heavy Commitments, Big Ambitions and Risks
SoftBank’s strategy right now isn’t conservative, it’s aggressive. In recent months the firm has taken multiple bold steps:
- It sold its entire stake in Nvidia (valued at US $5.8 billion), a move the company says was intended to free up capital to fund its larger AI ambitions.
- It is acquiring chip designer Ampere Computing for US $6.5 billion.
- It has committed to a $22.5 billion December payment to OpenAI, part of a larger $32 billion commitment to the company.
- It also plans to acquire a robotics-unit (from ABB Ltd.) for US $5.4 billion.
These moves show that SoftBank isn’t just investing passively, it’s trying to build a full-stack AI ecosystem: from chips and infrastructure, to robotics, to cloud/AI software.
But that ambition comes with very high risk. Massive capital commitments, future financing needs, and reliance on AI staying “hot” means any shift in investor sentiment or competitive dynamics could seriously hurt SoftBank’s valuation.
Analysts are warning that SoftBank’s stock drop may reflect a broader re-evaluation of AI valuations. Some point out that the AI hype cycle which flew high in 2024–2025 may be entering a more selective, cautious phase. As one strategist noted, the “phase of indiscriminate buying of AI-related stocks has ended.”
Others add that with rising competition not just from Gemini 3.0 but from other alternative AI architectures like open-source and RISC-V–based chip designs, SoftBank’s traditional bet on chip-powered AI infrastructure may no longer be a guaranteed win.
SoftBank’s own CFO, when asked if the sector is in a bubble, admitted uncertainty: “that’s something you only know for sure in hindsight.”
Side Effects: Impact on Riches & Leadership Confidence
The market slide hasn’t just hurt SoftBank as a company, it’s also taken a personal toll on its CEO, Masayoshi Son. Because much of Son’s wealth is tied to SoftBank stock, the decline reportedly wiped out nearly US $5 billion from his personal net worth in a single day.
That kind of volatility, especially after a strong recent run can shake confidence. For many investors, it raises the question: Is SoftBank a visionary long-term AI investor or a company over-extended in a frothy market?
SoftBank’s 40% slide reveals how fragile high-stakes bets in emerging technology can be. Once viewed as a shining example of AI-era investing, the firm now stands at a crossroads l still committed to large-scale AI infrastructure and growth, but facing increased scrutiny from investors, analysts, and competing technologies.
The company’s aggressive investments in OpenAI, chips, and robotics make it one of the most ambitious players in the AI race. But with that ambition comes enormous risk: declining confidence, massive capital needs, and dependency on an AI ecosystem that is itself rapidly evolving.
SoftBank’s story is now a test case for whether big, bold AI investing pays off, or becomes a cautionary tale of being early, leveraged, and over-exposed to hype.




