SoftBank Vision Fund to lay off 20% of employees in shift to bold AI bets, source and memo say

SoftBank Group Corp is undergoing a significant transformation as it reallocates resources to prioritize founder Masayoshi Son’s ambitious artificial intelligence (AI) initiatives. The company has announced plans to lay off nearly 20% of its Vision Fund team globally, marking the third round of layoffs since 2022. This strategic pivot comes despite the fund’s recent strong quarterly performance, driven by gains in public holdings such as Nvidia and Coupang. The Vision Fund currently employs over 300 people worldwide. The restructuring signals a departure from a diversified startup investment portfolio to a more concentrated focus on AI-driven ventures. Son’s strategy includes high-risk, high-reward investments in AI infrastructure, such as the proposed $500 billion Stargate project, which aims to establish a vast network of U.S. data centers in collaboration with OpenAI. A Vision Fund spokesperson confirmed the layoffs, emphasizing the organization’s commitment to bold, high-conviction investments in AI and breakthrough technologies. This shift represents a return to Son’s hallmark approach of making massive, concentrated bets, moving away from the sprawling venture capital model that characterized the Vision Fund’s earlier phase. SoftBank’s recent investments include a $9.7 billion stake in OpenAI through Vision Fund 2, which manages approximately $65.8 billion in total. Additionally, the company is focusing on building an AI ecosystem by acquiring chip firms like Graphcore and Ampere Computing and taking stakes in Intel and Nvidia. Despite the capital-intensive nature of this strategy, execution risks remain, as evidenced by delays in the Stargate project and a similar joint venture with OpenAI in Japan. SoftBank CFO Yoshimitsu Goto assured stakeholders that the company maintains a robust cash reserve of 4 trillion yen ($27 billion), underscoring its financial stability during this transition.