Friday, June 26, 2026
EN·DarkSubscribe
AI Infrastructure · News & Analysis
HomeCapital MarketsReport
Capital Markets · Report

SoftBank liquidates its entire $5.83 billion Nvidia stake and redirects capital into OpenAI and Stargate infrastructure projects.

Major institutional capital reallocation from established GPU suppliers toward application-layer and emerging infrastructure platforms.
Trade pressSlicast · November 11, 2025 · Global · Source: tomshardware.com
importance 75

SoftBank confirmed it sold its entire stake in Nvidia in October, offloading 32.1 million shares for $5.83 billion. The disclosure came Tuesday alongside the Japanese conglomerate's latest earnings report, which also revealed a $9.17 billion sale of T-Mobile US shares. Both moves form part of a broader strategy to reallocate capital into artificial intelligence ventures, among which is most notably a deepening alignment with OpenAI.

The stake sale severs a direct investment link between SoftBank and the world's most valuable chipmaker at a time when Nvidia's position in the AI boom is virtually unchallenged. Nvidia's data center GPU business is currently driving quarterly revenues in the tens of billions, with hyperscale buyers like Microsoft and Meta securing multi-quarter supply commitments. Even so, SoftBank is shifting focus from component suppliers to the companies consuming that compute and the infrastructure required to deliver it at scale.

Proceeds from the Nvidia divestment will support SoftBank's expanding AI portfolio, including a major investment in OpenAI and its ecosystem. The company is also in talks to fund Stargate, a next-generation AI data center initiative co-developed by OpenAI and Oracle that could cost tens of billions of dollars and require thousands of Nvidia accelerators. SoftBank reported a net profit of approximately $16.6 billion for the quarter, and while its Vision Fund segment remains volatile, the firm has increasingly positioned itself as a key capital allocator in AI, betting on end-to-end dominance from model development to deployment infrastructure.

Despite the Nvidia sale, SoftBank retains a strategic foothold in the silicon stack. It continues to own approximately 90 percent of Arm, whose CPU cores power everything from smartphones to Nvidia's Grace Blackwell CPU and future AI-focused Windows laptops. The sale has had no visible impact on Nvidia's stock value, with the company's shares remaining near all-time highs, supported by record earnings and strong forward guidance. Speaking to Reuters, SoftBank CFO Yoshimitsu Goto said that its investment in OpenAI was "very large" and the company had to use its "existing assets to finance new investments."

Read the original
SoftBank liquidates its entire $5.83 billion… · Slicast