SoftBank Group Swings to Profit in Q1 as AI Investments Drive Gains; Stargate Data Centre Project Faces Delays
SoftBank Group reported a net profit of $2.87 billion for the first quarter, fueled by strong valuations in its Vision Fund portfolio, particularly in AI-related investments. The Japanese technology investor’s turnaround from a loss a year ago is timely as it embarks on a large spending spree focused on artificial intelligence companies.
However, the company’s ambitious $500 billion Stargate project to develop U.S. data centres is delayed due to extended negotiations and site selection, SoftBank CFO Yoshimitsu Goto said. Despite the slower-than-expected pace, SoftBank is advancing with several identified sites and remains committed to building out the data centres over four years.
SoftBank’s Vision Funds now hold $45 billion in late-stage companies poised for IPOs, up from $36 billion in March, partly reflecting the recent $7.5 billion Vision Fund 2 investment in OpenAI. The Vision Fund posted a Q1 investment gain of about $4.94 billion, with South Korean e-commerce firm Coupang’s share price surge accounting for half of that gain.
SoftBank leads a $40 billion funding round for OpenAI, with $22.5 billion due by year-end. Founder Masayoshi Son aims to position SoftBank as a key “organiser of the industry” through strategic AI investments and the Stargate initiative.
SoftBank has also raised $7.8 billion recently by partially selling its stake in T-Mobile. However, the Vision Funds’ overall realized gains remain modest—only about $5 billion out of $172.2 billion committed capital as of June’s end—highlighting challenges in monetizing investments.

