Business | Schumpeter

Masayoshi Son is back in Silicon Valley—and late to the AI race

This isn’t the first time the Japanese tech investor has missed the hot new thing

Illustration of Masayoshi Son, too busy looking in the future to see the things that are in front him, in this instead the SoftBank logo that he tips over.
Illustration: Brett Ryder

MASAYOSHI SON is a man of contrasting superlatives. At the height of the dotcom bubble in early 2000 the Japanese technology mogul was briefly the world’s richest person, before losing $77bn in paper wealth, more than anyone before. In 2021 SoftBank Group, his telecoms-and-software conglomerate turned investment powerhouse, reported the biggest annual net profit in the history of Japan Inc, followed a year later by the second-biggest loss. His $20m wager in 2000 on Alibaba, a tatty online marketplace that grew into China’s mightiest e-emporium, counts as one of the best in the annals of venture capital (VC); his later $16bn punt on WeWork, an office-rental startup with tech pretensions, is an all-time dud. He has been called a “genius” and “dumb money”.

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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Stuck in the future”

From the October 12th 2024 edition

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