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SoftBank to Invest $100 Billion in US After Trump Win | Transport Topics
Donald Trump looks on as Masayoshi Son delivers remarks at the Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Fla., on Dec. 16. (Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)
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President-elect Donald Trump announced that SoftBank Group Corp. planned to invest $100 billion in the U.S. over the next four years during an event alongside CEO Masayoshi Son on Dec. 16.
“He’s doing this because he feels very optimistic about our country since the election,” Trump said, adding that the pledge represented “a monumental demonstration of confidence in America’s future.”
“I’m very, very excited,” Son, who met with Trump at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, told reporters. “I would really like to celebrate the great victory of President Trump and my confidence level to the economy of the United States has tremendously increased with his victory.”
The plan includes a pledge to create 100,000 jobs focused on artificial intelligence and related infrastructure, including investments in data centers, semiconductors and energy, according to a person familiar with the plan.
The Japanese billionaire joins a number of technology executives angling to win favor from the incoming administration. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman will give $1 million to Trump’s inaugural fund after having previously donated to President Joe Biden’s 2024 reelection campaign. Meta Platforms Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and artificial intelligence startup Perplexity have also pledged $1 million apiece.
“President Trump is a double down president, I’m going to have to double down,” Son said.
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Trump, with a grin, said he wanted Son to actually invest $200 billion in U.S. ventures.
“I will really try,” Son said with a laugh. “He’s a great negotiator.”
Son forged a strong relationship with Trump the last time he was president, making a similar visit to Trump Tower in December 2016 and promising the creation of 50,000 jobs as part of a $50 billion investment.
SoftBank was one of several companies that made such pledges at the time. The company did actively invest in U.S. companies through its Vision Fund investment vehicle. But Softbank later ran into trouble as many of its deals floundered, including a multi-billion dollar investment in WeWork, the office space startup that ultimately filed for bankruptcy.
Son’s announcement this time marks the highest-profile commitment by a company to expand investment in the U.S. since Trump’s election win. The president-elect promised during his campaign to boost the U.S. economy by cutting corporate tax rates, using tariffs to spur domestic investment by foreign companies and rolling back regulations Republicans say have hampered economic growth.
Trump also promised to speed permitting for anyone willing to invest $1 billion or more for projects in the U.S. While he offered no specifics on how he would accelerate approvals, his pledge addressed a key concern among tech and energy companies that regulatory delays risk slowing upgrades to U.S. energy infrastructure needed to drive development in AI.
“This is President Trump delivering on the promise he made to the American people on the campaign trail that he was going to make the United States of America the manufacturing superpower of the world,” Karoline Leavitt, a spokeswoman for the Trump transition, told Fox Business on Dec. 16.
But Trump also told voters that he wanted foreign-owned corporations to become U.S.-based entities, pledging tax cuts and deregulation to lure companies onshore. The Softbank investment shows that is unlikely to come to fruition, with global companies eager to make announcements viewed favorably by Trump, but don’t want the commitment of uprooting their headquarters and supply chains.
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One question with the SoftBank announcement is where the company will get the capital for its latest pledge. During Trump’s last term, Son was raising his $100 billion Vision Fund with money from outside investors and poured the cash into startups such as WeWork, Uber Technologies Inc. and DoorDash Inc.
SoftBank doesn’t have the cash on hand to deliver on Son’s pledge this time. The company had the 3.8 trillion yen ($25 billion) in cash and equivalents on its balance at the end of September.
Still, the company’s finances have recovered with the initial public offering of chip design firm Arm Holdings Plc. SoftBank still owns about 90% of Arm, which now has a market capitalization of about $160 billion.
Son has vowed to increase his investments in artificial intelligence, which he has described as a technology that will change virtually every business. SoftBank invested $500 million in OpenAI in October and is aiming to increase that investment by acquiring up to $1.5 billion in the startup’s stock through a tender offer for existing shareholders.
CNBC first reported details of SoftBank’s investment plans.