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

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

    Published by Global Banking and Finance Review

    Posted on September 19, 2025

    3 min read

    Last updated: January 21, 2026

    SoftBank Vision Fund to lay off 20% of employees in shift to bold AI bets, source and memo say - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Tags:innovationventure capitalArtificial Intelligencefinancial communityinvestment portfolios

    Quick Summary

    SoftBank Vision Fund is cutting 20% of its workforce to focus on AI investments, marking a strategic shift under Masayoshi Son.

    Table of Contents

    • SoftBank's Strategic Shift Towards AI
    • Details of the Layoffs
    • Financial Implications and Future Plans

    SoftBank Vision Fund Cuts 20% of Workforce to Focus on AI Investments

    SoftBank's Strategic Shift Towards AI

    (Corrects number of employees at Vision Fund to more than 300 instead of 44, paragraph 2)

    Details of the Layoffs

    By Krystal Hu

    Financial Implications and Future Plans

    (Reuters) - SoftBank Group will lay off nearly 20% of its Vision Fund team globally as it shifts resources to founder Masayoshi Son’s large-scale artificial intelligence bets in the United States, according to a memo seen by Reuters and a source familiar with the plan.

    The cuts mark the third round of layoffs at the Japanese investment conglomerate’s flagship fund since 2022. Vision Fund currently has over 300 employees globally. Unlike previous rounds, when the group was saddled with major losses, the latest reductions come after the fund last month reported its strongest quarterly performance since June 2021, driven by gains in public holdings such as Nvidia and South Korean e-commerce firm Coupang.

    The move signals a pivot away from a broad portfolio of startup investments. While the fund will continue to make new bets, remaining staff will dedicate more resources to Son’s ambitious AI initiatives, such as the proposed $500 billion Stargate project - an initiative to build a vast network of U.S. data centers in partnership with OpenAI, the source added.

    A Vision Fund spokesperson confirmed the layoffs without commenting on the details, and said in a statement: “We continually adjust the organization to best execute our long-term strategy - making bold, high-conviction investments in AI and breakthrough technologies, and creating long-term value for our stakeholders.”  

    The restructuring marks a return to Son’s classic high-risk, high-reward approach of making massive, concentrated wagers, moving on from the sprawling venture capital model that defined the last era of the Vision Fund, and a period in which the group was forced to de-risk, sell assets and rebuild credibility after incurring billions in losses on its once high-flying bet on the office-sharing startup WeWork.

    This shift toward capital‑intensive AI infrastructure reflects where Son - who made his name with outsized bets and was an early champion of AI - sees the path back to the top. He is now aggressively pursuing new investments in foundation models and the infrastructure layer, sometimes at premium valuations.

    In the past 12 months, Son has invested $9.7 billion in OpenAI through Vision Fund 2, which manages about $65.8 billion in total. SoftBank is also plotting a capital-intensive infrastructure strategy centered on its crown jewel, chip designer Arm. It has acquired chip firms Graphcore and Ampere Computing and taken stakes in Intel and Nvidia. These moves aim to build an ecosystem spanning chips, data centers, and models to support future AI adoptions.

    The capital-intensive strategy carries execution risk, underscored by recent delays in both the U.S. Stargate project and a similar joint venture with OpenAI in Japan, Reuters reported this week.

    SoftBank CFO Yoshimitsu Goto said the company held a “very safe level” of cash of 4 trillion yen ($27 billion) on the company's most recent earnings call in August.

    (Reporting by Krystal Hu in San Francisco; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

    Key Takeaways

    • •SoftBank Vision Fund is laying off 20% of its workforce.
    • •The focus is shifting towards AI investments in the US.
    • •This marks the third round of layoffs since 2022.
    • •SoftBank plans a $500 billion Stargate project with OpenAI.
    • •The strategy includes investments in AI infrastructure and chips.

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

    1What percentage of employees is SoftBank laying off?

    SoftBank is laying off nearly 20% of its Vision Fund team globally.

    2What is the reason behind the layoffs at SoftBank's Vision Fund?

    The layoffs are part of a shift in resources towards founder Masayoshi Son's large-scale artificial intelligence bets.

    3How many employees does the Vision Fund currently have?

    The Vision Fund currently has over 300 employees globally.

    4What has Masayoshi Son invested in through Vision Fund 2?

    In the past 12 months, Masayoshi Son has invested $9.7 billion in OpenAI through Vision Fund 2.

    5What is the financial strategy of SoftBank under Masayoshi Son?

    The restructuring marks a return to a high-risk, high-reward approach, focusing on capital-intensive AI infrastructure.

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