SoftBank Secures $40 Billion Loan for More OpenAI Investments
By Reuters | 27 Mar, 2026
Masayoshi Son's SoftBank Group will use the bridge loan to bolster its OpenAI investments as it continues to go all-in on the AI boom.
SoftBank Group said on Friday it has secured a $40 billion bridge loan to bolster investments in ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and for general corporate purposes, marking another significant step in its artificial intelligence strategy.
The Japanese investment conglomerate, led by founder Masayoshi Son, continues to strengthen ties with OpenAI as global tech firms race to gain an edge in the increasingly competitive generative AI space.
The Japanese investor has previously agreed to invest $30 billion in OpenAI through its Vision Fund 2. The bridge loan is unsecured, the company said.
The loan, which matures in March 2027, was arranged with lenders including JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Mizuho Bank, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp and MUFG Bank.
OpenAI, backed by Microsoft, has emerged as a leading player following the widespread adoption of ChatGPT, prompting a surge in investment across the sector.
The loan underscores Son's increasingly aggressive bet on AI following years when SoftBank swung between outsized gains and heavy Vision Fund losses.
SoftBank and OpenAI were among the companies behind the Stargate Project last year, which said it aimed to invest up to $500 billion over four years to build AI infrastructure in the United States.
Son and then President-elect Donald Trump announced in December 2024 that SoftBank planned to invest $100 billion in AI and related infrastructure in the U.S. over four years.
(Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid and Pooja Desai)
Articles
- Trump's All-Caps Post Alarms Anxious Oil-Hungry World
- Automakers Unveil New EVs Despite US Sales Downturn
- Top 10 Favorite California UFO Hotspots
- Pope Leo Emerges As High-Profile Trump Critic
- Pam Bondi Fired from Attorney General Post
- China Adds 12 New Banks to Digital Yuan Program
- Hyundai 's March EV Sales in S. Korea Jumps 38% on Year
- China's Oil Stockpiles Protected Stocks from Iran Disruption
- McDonald's Draws Worried Consumers with $3 Menu Items and $4 Breakfast Deals
- Tesla Sales of China-Made EVs Rise for Second Straight Quarter
