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Former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin is building an investor group to acquire ByteDance's TikTok, as a bipartisan piece of legislation winding its way through Congress threatens its continued existence in the U.S. "It's a great business and I'm going to put together a group to buy TikTok." There's no way that the Chinese would ever let a U.S. company own something like this in China," Mnuchin said. Last week, Mnuchin's Liberty Strategic Capital was a lead investor in a $1 billion capital raise to stabilize New York Community Bancorp. That administration also took an antagonistic stance toward TikTok, which ultimately resulted in ByteDance striking a data partnership with Oracle .
Persons: Steven Mnuchin, ByteDance's, ByteDance, Mnuchin, CNBC's, Masa, Joe Biden, Peter Thiel, Vinod Khosla, Keith Rabois, TikTok, Shou Zi Chew, Wang Wenbin, Bobby Kotick, Donald Trump, Trump Organizations: U.S, Liberty Strategic Capital, Vision Fund, Senate, Lawmakers, China Foreign Ministry, Financial Times, Street, Activision, Community Bancorp, Oracle Locations: Liberty, ByteDance, U.S, China, TikTok, New
Arm shares rocketed as much as 41% late Wednesday after the chip designer reported revenue and earnings that sailed past analysts' estimates. SoftBank took Arm public in September and still owns about 930 million shares, or roughly 90% of the chip designer's outstanding stock. Arm pared its initial gains, but SoftBank's stake still jumped by almost $16 billion — from close to $71.6 billion to $87.4 billion — after the earnings report. Softbank acquired Arm in 2016 for $32 billion, and its shares were worth just over $47 billion at the time of the IPO last year. The Vision Fund, SoftBank's venture arm, posted a $6.2 billion loss in the second quarter of 2023, tied to WeWork and other soured bets.
Persons: Son, Masayoshi Son's SoftBank, SoftBank, Softbank Organizations: Vision Locations: Tokyo, Arm's, WeWork, Alibaba
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailMasa Son flexes Arm as the company debuts as the biggest IPO of the yearCNBC’s Deirdre Bosa joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss Arm after the company debuts as the biggest IPO of the year.
Persons: Masa, Deirdre Bosa
You can watch David Faber's interview with Arm CEO Rene Haas and SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son live on CNBC Pro. But SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, who made a fortune through Chinese juggernaut Alibaba , said SoftBank had reduced its "exposure in China" by a significant amount. Neither Arm nor SoftBank, which acquired Arm for $32 billion in 2016, directly control their China subsidiaries. Arm now only directly owns around 5% of Arm China, but the group still accounts for nearly a quarter of Arm's fiscal 2023 revenue, according to pre-offering filings. Son was focused on SoftBank's stake in Alibaba, which SoftBank has been reducing steadily over the last few years.
Persons: David Faber's, Rene Haas, Masayoshi, Masayoshi Son, Alibaba, SoftBank, Biden, Son, CNBC's David Faber, ByteDance Organizations: CNBC Pro, Arm, CNBC, Nasdaq, Intel, Nvidia, Vision, U.S Locations: China, Alibaba, SoftBank
Ma, who also co-founded e-commerce firm Alibaba (BABA), has a 9.9% stake in Ant, according to Bloomberg. Chinese regulators pulled the plug on Ant’s $37 billion IPO in November 2020 and ordered the company to restructure its business. In recent years, he has reportedly spent time in Japan, home to his friend and Alibaba investor, SoftBank (SFTBF) CEO Masa Son, and in Hong Kong. In January, Ma gave up control of Ant after it spent two years revamping its business from consumer lending to insurance products at the behest of regulators. Ant and its units were also fined $984 million by Chinese financial regulators last week, for allegedly breaking rules related to consumer protection and corporate governance.
Persons: Jack Ma’s, Ant, Ma, Masa Son, Alibaba Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Bloomberg, Ant Group, CNN Locations: Hong Kong, China, Shanghai, Japan, Tokyo
Hong Kong CNN —Joseph Tsai, executive vice chairman and cofounder of Alibaba Group, will succeed Daniel Zhang as chairman, according to an announcement by the Chinese tech giant on Tuesday. Eddie Wu, chairman of Alibaba’s e-commerce platform Taobao and Tmall Group, will succeed Zhang as chief executive officer and replace him on the company’s board of directors. Following the transition, Zhang will continue to serve as the chairman and CEO of Alibaba’s cloud unit. “I am grateful for the trust of the Alibaba Group board of directors and am honored to succeed Daniel as Alibaba’s CEO,” he said. Zhang was appointed by Alibaba as CEO in May 2015, eight years after he joined the company.
Persons: Hong Kong CNN — Joseph Tsai, Daniel Zhang, Jack Ma, Eddie Wu, Zhang, ” Zhang, Wu, , Daniel, , Alibaba, Ma, Masa Son Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Alibaba, Alibaba’s, Tmall, Alibaba Cloud Intelligence Group, Ant Group, Alibaba Group, University of Hong Kong, University of Tokyo Locations: Hong Kong, Beijing, Japan, China
Hong Kong CNN —Alibaba founder Jack Ma gave a lecture as a visiting professor to the University of Tokyo, as the high-profile Chinese entrepreneur retreats further from his business empire following Beijing’s regulatory crackdown. His return was a symbolic move and probably a “planned media event” by Beijing intended to appease private sector fears, according to analysts. In April, the University of Hong Kong announced that Ma would join its business school for the next three years. Ma became a professor at the University of Tokyo on May 1, and his period of stay is until October 31, a profile page of Ma shows. Beijing needs the private sector more than ever to shore up growth and create jobs.
Persons: Hong Kong CNN —, Jack Ma, Ma, , Masa Son, Ma chatted, Xi Jinping, Li Qiang Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, University of Tokyo, Alibaba Group, University of Hong Kong, Damo Academy Locations: Hong Kong, Japan, China, India, Malaysia, Shanghai, Beijing, Spain, Hangzhou
Hong Kong/Beijing CNN —Jack Ma, the billionaire founder of Alibaba (BABA) and once one of China’s most prominent entrepreneurs, has made a rare public appearance in the country. Ma visited the city of Hangzhou and was seen meeting with students and teachers at the Alibaba-funded Yungu School. That intervention by regulators followed a speech from Ma in which he criticized China’s banks and financial regulators. In a statement to CNN about the trip, the Jack Ma Foundation said the Alibaba founder “travels very often in China and overseas.”“Mr. He paid a visit to Hangzhou Yungu School today and had a chat with teachers there on education,” a spokesperson said.
Masayoshi Son, CEO of SoftBank, has been weighing up various options for chipmaker Arm after Nvidia walked away from buying the company. SoftBank is planning to cut at least 30% of staff at its ambitious investment arm, the Vision Fund, a source confirmed to CNBC's Deirdre Bosa. At least 150 out of 500 Vision Fund workers will be impacted by the cuts, according to Bloomberg, which first reported the news on Thursday. SoftBank Founder Masayoshi Son had foreshadowed cost cutting and a more conservative investment approach this summer after the company posted a $21.6 billion quarterly loss for the Vision Fund. Still, he said at the time, Vision Fund headcount may need to be "reduced dramatically" with "cost reduction" needed across units.
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