Alibaba SEC Filing May Signal SoftBank Plans to Sell, Citi Says

Alibaba SEC Filing May Signal SoftBank Plans to Sell, Citi Says


(Bloomberg) — Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. registered one billion American depositary shares that hadn’t been registered earlier than, suggesting SoftBank Group Corp. might intend to promote a few of its shares.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Japan’s SoftBank backed Alibaba earlier than its preliminary public providing so a big portion of its holdings within the firm should not registered as ADSs, Citigroup Inc. analysts together with Alicia Yap wrote in a notice. SoftBank owns 5.39 billion atypical shares of Alibaba, equal to 673.76 million ADSs, or a 24.8% stake, based on Citi’s calculations.

Alibaba’s Hong Kong shares dropped as a lot as 4.6%, main declines of the Hang Seng Index. SoftBank’s inventory rose as a lot as 5.4% in Tokyo.

Masayoshi Son’s SoftBank has been below strain in current months as the worth of many portfolio corporations have slid with the expertise downturn. SoftBank’s shares have tumbled about 50% from their peak final yr with the decline within the worth of holdings, together with Didi Global Inc., One 97 Communications Ltd. and DoorDash Inc.

SoftBank, which stories earnings Tuesday, has used buybacks prior to now to bolster its personal inventory. Alibaba is by far its most dear holding.

A consultant for SoftBank wasn’t instantly obtainable for remark.

READ: Alibaba Files With SEC to Register Additional 1 Billion ADS

The Alibaba submitting with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission will permit the corporate’s stockholders whose shares have by no means been registered with the SEC to have the pliability to promote their shares, Citi stated. The registration may additionally cowl the corporate’s have to subject new shares for the worker fairness incentive plan.

Alibaba registered about 2 billion ADSs when the corporate performed its IPO within the U.S. in 2014.

Story continues

(Adds a chart)

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.


Exit mobile version