SoftBank Group’s stock has been the gravitational center of the Nikkei’s run. The shares rocketed over 16% on May 7 as post-Golden Week trading erupted , then delivered a 20% single-day surge on May 21 following reports that OpenAI was preparing for a public listing
. Another nearly 12% gain on May 22 extended the move
. By then, foreign investors were aggressively buying Tokyo as a primary AI market hub
.
Underpinning all of this was a record quarterly profit. SoftBank reported earnings of roughly $12 billion in mid-May — more than triple the year-earlier figure — fueled largely by unrealized gains on its growing OpenAI stake . The numbers gave concrete form to the AI narrative, reinforcing the sense that SoftBank had positioned itself at the center of the most important technology shift in a generation.
SoftBank’s relationship with OpenAI has evolved from opportunistic investor to defining strategic commitment. The company has led multiple funding rounds and, according to Jefferies research, supplied roughly 85% of OpenAI’s recent capital, inflating the startup’s valuation from $150 billion to $840 billion in the process . A further $30 billion investment is expected during 2026
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On paper, the bet has been enormously profitable. But the scale of the exposure has led analysts to describe SoftBank as a publicly traded proxy for OpenAI, magnifying concentration risk with every additional dollar committed . Critics note that the spending program is SoftBank’s most ambitious since the $100 billion Vision Funds of 2017 and 2019
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The numbers are stark. MST Financial analyst David Gibson estimated that SoftBank has committed approximately $113 billion in investments but has funding capacity of only $58.5 billion . The gap raises uncomfortable questions about how much additional debt the group can shoulder before credit metrics deteriorate materially.
While markets have celebrated the AI boom, credit analysts and equity researchers have been issuing increasingly pointed warnings.
In March 2026, S&P Global Ratings revised its credit outlook for SoftBank Group from stable to negative, maintaining a BB+ long-term issuer credit rating. The agency explicitly identified OpenAI as one of SoftBank’s investments with the “weakest” credit quality . S&P warned that the additional $30 billion investment could hurt the group’s liquidity and the credit quality of its assets, noting that SoftBank’s AI investments mostly involve fledgling startups and private companies exposed to significant innovation risk and fierce competition
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Jefferies followed shortly after with a downgrade to Underperform, citing concentrated investment risk, rising leverage, and valuation transparency concerns. The firm flagged that SoftBank’s position as the dominant capital provider in OpenAI’s funding rounds could inflate reported valuations and, by extension, SoftBank’s own net asset value . Related-party payments — an estimated $3 billion per year to OpenAI and $200 million to Arm — create what Jefferies described as a self-reinforcing valuation loop that may not be sustainable
.
Perhaps the most fundamental concern is that OpenAI’s competitive position is no longer dominant. Rivals including Anthropic (Claude), Google (Gemini), and well-funded Chinese models have closed the gap rapidly . OpenAI posted a $12 billion loss in Q3 2025
, and the cost to train and run frontier models continues to rise. The once-clear lead that justified eye-watering valuations has eroded, leaving SoftBank’s all-in wager increasingly tied to an AI arms race with no obvious endpoint
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The Nikkei’s journey past 65,000 is a genuine milestone born of real catalysts: geopolitical relief, a semiconductor super-cycle, and SoftBank’s astonishing AI-linked profit surge. But the same concentration that made the rally possible now represents the market’s most acute downside risk.
If AI sentiment turns, if OpenAI’s next funding round fails to validate its $840 billion valuation at arm’s length, or if credit markets tighten while SoftBank still needs to fund tens of billions in commitments, the unwind could be sharp. The Jefferies downgrade implies roughly 19% downside risk pending OpenAI’s next funding materialization . The market has assigned SoftBank a 6.62 price-to-earnings ratio — suggesting skepticism about the sustainability of inflated net asset values
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For now, the AI trade remains intact. But the analyst chorus is growing louder: what lifted the Nikkei to 65,000 could, under different conditions, pull it back down.
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