SoftBank Group’s (SFTBY) stock moved higher after the company unveiled plans to raise about $1.6 billion through a new hybrid bond offering aimed largely at individual investors. The move signals growing reliance on Japan’s retail bond market at a time when demand for yield is strengthening and investors are increasingly willing to take on higher risk for better returns.
The proposed issuance totals 260 billion yen and will come in the form of 35-year subordinated bonds. Pricing is expected to be finalized on June 5, with early guidance suggesting a coupon range between 4.8% and 5.6% for the initial five-year period. That yield level places the instrument firmly in high-income territory for retail investors, especially in Japan’s still-low interest rate environment.
The market reacted positively to the announcement, with SoftBank shares seeing upward momentum as investors digested the potential success of the fundraising strategy. The appeal of the bonds lies in their relatively high coupon, which stands out in a global environment where fixed-income returns remain under pressure.
SoftBank Group Corp., SFTBY
However, the structure of the bonds also reflects elevated risk. The notes are subordinated, meaning they rank below senior debt in repayment priority. They also allow the issuer to defer interest payments under certain conditions, making them more flexible for SoftBank but riskier for bondholders. Rating agencies are expected to treat roughly half of the instruments as equity, underscoring their hybrid nature.
SoftBank said proceeds from the issuance will be used partly to refinance existing dollar-denominated hybrid debt, including instruments that have a first call date in July 2027. More broadly, the company continues to align its financing strategy with its aggressive push into artificial intelligence investments.
The conglomerate, led by Masayoshi Son, has been repositioning itself around AI-focused ventures and infrastructure, requiring substantial capital deployment. The latest bond sale is seen as part of a wider effort to maintain liquidity while supporting long-term bets in high-growth technology sectors.
The transaction also highlights a broader shift in Japan’s capital markets. Retail investors are playing a more significant role in corporate bond demand, helping companies like SoftBank tap into new funding channels outside traditional institutional investors.
In April alone, SoftBank issued 418 billion yen in retail bonds, alongside $3.6 billion in dollar-denominated notes and euro-denominated bonds aimed at institutional buyers. This diversified issuance strategy reflects both strong investor appetite and SoftBank’s need to maintain flexible funding across currencies and markets.
At the same time, concerns around credit risk remain. SoftBank’s credit-default swaps are still among the widest of major Japanese corporations, and S&P Global Ratings recently revised its outlook on the company to negative. That reflects lingering caution about leverage and investment risk, even as the company continues to access capital at scale.
The post SoftBank (SFTBY) Stock; Gains on Plan to Raise $1.6B Through High-Yield Retail Bonds appeared first on CoinCentral.

