Dataconomy
  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • DeFi & Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Gaming
    • Startups
    • Tech
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Case Studies
    • Whitepapers
    • AI Models Leaderboard
  • AI toolsNEW
  • Newsletter
  • + More
    • Glossary
    • Conversations
    • Events
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Contact
      • Imprint
      • Legal & Privacy
      • Partner With Us
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • AI
  • Tech
  • Cybersecurity
  • Finance
  • DeFi & Blockchain
  • Startups
  • Gaming
Dataconomy
  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • DeFi & Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Gaming
    • Startups
    • Tech
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Case Studies
    • Whitepapers
    • AI Models Leaderboard
  • AI toolsNEW
  • Newsletter
  • + More
    • Glossary
    • Conversations
    • Events
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Contact
      • Imprint
      • Legal & Privacy
      • Partner With Us
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Dataconomy
No Result
View All Result

The why behind SoftBank’s Nvidia stake sale

The acquisition aligns with SoftBank’s ownership of Arm, creating a vertically integrated chip ecosystem.

byKerem Gülen
November 11, 2025
in Industry
Home Industry
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on WhatsAppShare on e-mail
Google Preferred Source

SoftBank has sold its entire $5.83 billion Nvidia stake, a move that isn’t a retreat from AI but a massive strategic move. The cash is being used to fund a $6.5 billion all-cash acquisition of a smaller, private AI chip designer: Ampere Computing.

The Japanese conglomerate confirmed the sale of 32.1 million Nvidia shares in its Tuesday earnings statement. While the sale helped SoftBank post a blowout $19 billion gain for its Vision Fund, the move is less about profit-taking and more about funding a massive, $30.5 billion spending spree planned for this quarter alone.

The $5.83 billion from the chipmaker, combined with a separate $9.17 billion T-Mobile stake sale, provides the capital for a new, aggressive phase in CEO Masayoshi Son’s AI ambitions.

Stay Ahead of the Curve!

Don't miss out on the latest insights, trends, and analysis in the world of data, technology, and startups. Subscribe to our newsletter and get exclusive content delivered straight to your inbox.

“We want to provide a lot of investment opportunities for investors, while we can still maintain financial strength,” said SoftBank’s Chief Financial Officer Yoshimitsu Goto during an investor presentation, reports CNBC.

SoftBank sold $5.8B worth Nvidia stake to buy a new AI chipmaker

This move is a direct “swap” in strategy. The company is cashing out its passive investment in the current market leader, Nvidia, to acquire a direct competitor.

The $6.5 billion Ampere acquisition, which is closing this quarter, signals a massive strategic shift. Instead of just holding stock in an AI company, SoftBank is moving to own the AI infrastructure itself.

Who is Ampere Computing?

Ampere is a U.S.-based semiconductor firm that designs high-performance, energy-efficient processors specifically for data centers and AI workloads.

The key connection: Ampere’s chips are built on the Arm architecture.

SoftBank, which owns a majority stake in Arm, is now doubling down on its own ecosystem. By acquiring Ampere, Masayoshi Son is betting that he can build a powerful, vertically integrated alternative to Nvidia’s dominant platform.

While selling Nvidia—a stock SoftBank has sold out of twice now—may look like a mistake to some, Son is playing a different game. He’s no longer content to be a passenger in the AI boom; he’s using the cash from his former Nvidia stake to try and build the engine.


Featured image credit

Tags: Nvidiasoftbank

Related Posts

What Europe’s AI startups are building for the enterprise era

What Europe’s AI startups are building for the enterprise era

June 19, 2026
Generative search: Should you kick the keyword to the curb?

Generative search: Should you kick the keyword to the curb?

June 19, 2026
Why modern software development begins at the application layer

Why modern software development begins at the application layer

June 18, 2026
From agents to world models: What San Francisco revealed about AI’s next phase

From agents to world models: What San Francisco revealed about AI’s next phase

June 18, 2026
How BTCC makes crypto trading more accessible for global users

How BTCC makes crypto trading more accessible for global users

June 18, 2026
Embedded finance: How payment infrastructure became the strongest user retention tool

Embedded finance: How payment infrastructure became the strongest user retention tool

June 18, 2026

LATEST NEWS

OpenAI improves health responses for free ChatGPT users

Adobe expands Firefly AI across Premiere, Illustrator, InDesign and Frame.io

Spotify launches Reserved to give superfans early ticket access

Google discontinues Nest Home Mini and Nest Audio

Instagram adds unique captions for each carousel slide

Steam Next Fest sees one in five demos labeled for generative AI

BEST AI MODELS LEADERBOARD

See the best AI models, ranked by intelligence, benchmark results, speed and token price. Find the most suitable LLMs, Text-to-Image, Image Editing, Text-to-Speech, Text-to-Video and Image-to-Video  artificial intelligence model for your tasks and business.

LATEST TOOLS

Novoresume

PolyAI

SeaArt

H2O.ai

Techpresso

Namecheap Free Logo Maker

Binaural Beats Factory

Lyricallabs

Jobscan

Vsub

Dataconomy

COPYRIGHT © DATACONOMY MEDIA GMBH, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

  • About
  • Imprint
  • Contact
  • Legal & Privacy

Follow Us

  • News
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Cybersecurity
    • DeFi & Blockchain
    • Finance
    • Gaming
    • Startups
    • Tech
  • Industry
  • Research
  • Resources
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Case Studies
    • Whitepapers
    • AI Models Leaderboard
  • AI tools
  • Newsletter
  • + More
    • Glossary
    • Conversations
    • Events
    • About
      • Who we are
      • Contact
      • Imprint
      • Legal & Privacy
      • Partner With Us
No Result
View All Result
Subscribe

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. You can choose to accept or reject them. Visit our Privacy Policy.