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This Article is From May 17, 2018

SoftBank Is Said to Eye Another $100 Billion for Fund 2.0

(Bloomberg) -- Masayoshi Son, the founder and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group Corp., is already thinking about his next $100 billion venture -- a version 2.0 of the world's biggest technology fund, according to people familiar with the matter.

The Japanese entrepreneur has held preliminary discussions with investors about committing to a second fund as early as 2019, the people said, asking not to be identified as the matter is private. The people said the planned fund would likely draw a wider pool of investors than the first one, in which most of the contributions came from sovereign wealth funds in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

A representative for SoftBank declined to comment.

The fund is likely to be similar in size to the almost $100 billion that was raised for the first Vision Fund, the people said. About $45 billion of the current fund has been deployed on investments ranging from Uber Technologies Inc. to a stake in Nvidia Corp., the people said. No final decisions have been made and the billionaire businessman may also decide against the plan, they said.

“I'm not sure where he can find more good investment opportunities,” said Dan Baker, an analyst at Morningstar Investment Management Asia Ltd. in Hong Kong. “That seems like a lot of additional capital.”

Read More: Inside Masayoshi Son's Eccentric, Relentless Deal Spree

At an event in Tokyo on Tuesday, Son said that the second fund would be launched soon.

“Vision Fund 2 will definitely come, it's just a matter of when,” Son said. “Sometime in the near future.”

Son didn't give a specific time-line or scale, but he did talk at length about how he makes investments. He invoked the mindset of Yoda, the green Jedi master from the “Star Wars” films.

“Yoda says use the force,” he said. “Don't think, just feel it.”

He continued: “Every time my team does due diligence, they do it for one, two, three months and do a deep dive. But my first insight in the first few minutes is sometimes more meaningful than detailed calculation.”

“You do it so many times, you don't even need to think,” Son said. “You can just feel it.”

SoftBank shares slid 1.7 percent in Tokyo trading and are down about 5 percent this year.

--With assistance from Yuji Nakamura

To contact the reporters on this story: Alex Barinka in New York at abarinka2@bloomberg.net, Dinesh Nair in London at dnair5@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Elizabeth Fournier at efournier5@bloomberg.net, Aaron Kirchfeld at akirchfeld@bloomberg.net, Michael Hytha

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.

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