TOKYO – Japanese internet and energy company SoftBank Group Corp. is reporting a more than 11-fold surge in profit for the fiscal third quarter thanks to strong sales and to improved results from U.S. carrier Sprint.
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SoftBank, which also owns stakes in Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba and British computer chip and software giant Arm, reported an October-December profit Wednesday of 912.3 billion yen ($8.4 billion), up from 80.3 billion yen a year earlier.
Quarterly sales rose 3.9 percent to 2.4 trillion yen ($22 billion).
The Tokyo-based company, which sells the Pepper robot, did not give annual forecasts, citing uncertainties, as is its usual policy.
SoftBank was the first carrier to offer the Apple iPhone in Japan and is buying a major stake in Uber.
Last year, it set up a major fund to invest in various technology companies.
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It said Wednesday that it will do a share offering for its Japanese telecommunications company in Japan to raise cash for more investments.
Technology licensing revenue from Arm, which was not part of SoftBank’s group companies the previous fiscal year, helped boost earnings for the current fiscal year, the company said.
SoftBank is headed by Masayoshi Son, a graduate of the University of California, Berkeley.
A visionary sometimes seen in the company of high-profile figures like Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates and President Donald Trump, he has been aggressive in investing in artificial intelligence, the internet of things and renewable energy.
Son is a relatively vocal opponent of nuclear power, especially after the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster in northeastern Japan.
SoftBank also owns the SoftBank Hawks baseball club, which won last year’s Japan Series, this country’s equivalent of the World Series.
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