Masayoshi Son, chairman and chief executive officer of SoftBank Group at the SoftBank World 2018 event in Tokyo, Japan.
Kiyoshi Ota | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Off the heels of a blowout quarterly report, SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son told CNBC’s Andrew Ross Sorkin that he expects to see even more exits from companies in the Vision Fund’s portfolio.

“I want to create an ecosystem… where we would have multiple companies going for IPOs,” Masa Son said in the interview, which was recorded Wednesday night. He said 14 of SoftBank’s Vision Fund companies had an IPO or other exit over the last 12 months, up from eight exits the year before.

SoftBank on Wednesday reported $45.88 billion in net profit for the last quarter, largely thanks to the IPO of one of the crown jewels in its Vision Fund portfolio, the South Korean e-commerce company Coupang.

SoftBank also benefitted from the rising stock price of Uber, which it had invested billions in before the ride-haling company had its IPO. DoorDash, another Vision Fund portfolio company, also had a successful IPO last year.

SoftBank’s Vision Fund, a $100 billion fund for placing big bets on technology start-ups, has investments in companies like the online grocer GoPuff, self-driving car company Aurora and fitness tech company Whoop. SoftBank is invested in about 200 companies through its two Vision Funds.

The huge quarter comes after a remarkable slump for companies SoftBank made huge bets on, especially WeWork. WeWork botched its high-profile IPO in 2019, nuking billions in value from the buzzy start-up and ultimately leading to the ouster of its co-founder and CEO, Adam Neumann.

Still, Masa Son seemed optimistic about WeWork when asked if he had any regrets about his investments.

“WeWork is turning around now,” Masa Son said, adding that he expects the company to be profitable “sometime in the next several quarters.”

But beyond the WeWork debacle, Masa Son said he has bigger regrets for the investments he passed on, such as Airbnb and software company Snowflake. He said he didn’t invest in Airbnb because he thought it was too expensive at the time. Shares of Airbnb are down about 4% year to date, but it still maintains an $85 billion market cap.

“I saw they’re a pretty good company, a great business model, great talent an so on,” Masa Son said of Airbnb. “I thought the price was a little too expensive. We were discussing to invest, but I was not smart enough to accept the price tag that they had a couple of years ago.”

Masa Son said most investments he missed happened because of the price to get in on an investment. He also said that even though the Vision Fund tends to invest in high-growth, money-losing companies, he still looks for a positive outcome in the long term.

“So you have to have a pretty long view… and you have to imagine and so on,” Masa Son said. “Sometimes you may imagine the result would be a bad result, as we have experienced, but sometimes you have to be brave enough to imagine, you know, more on the positive side.”

You May Also Like

Oracle is a distant laggard in cloud infrastructure market even after TikTok deal

Larry Ellison, chairman of Oracle Corp., speaks during the Oracle OpenWorld conference…
Apple Shares Weakens After Warning of Dull Holiday Quarter

Apple Shares Weakens After Warning of Dull Holiday Quarter

Apple shares on Friday pared losses that were driven by its forecast…

Amazon, DraftKings and more were interested in The Athletic before sale to New York Times

The Athletic co-founders Adam Hansmann and Alex Mather Source: The Athletic In…

Tesla surges 20%, nearly wiping out five straight days of selling

Tesla CEO Elon Musk attends an opening ceremony for Tesla China-made Model…