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SoftBank sinks 12% as Asia tech rout tracks declines in the U.S.

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Why This Matters

The significant drop in SoftBank's stock highlights the increasing volatility and concerns surrounding AI infrastructure costs and market demand in the tech industry. This decline reflects broader investor apprehensions about the sustainability of AI-driven growth and the competitive landscape for chip designers like Arm. For consumers and industry stakeholders, it signals potential shifts in AI investment strategies and technology development trajectories.

Key Takeaways

The logo of Japanese company SoftBank Group at the company's headquarters in Tokyo on Nov. 21, 2025.

SoftBank Group plunged more than 12% on Friday, leading a broad selloff in Asian technology stocks, amid mounting concerns over the rising cost of artificial intelligence infrastructure.

The Japanese conglomerate led losses across the region after the Nasdaq Composite fell for a fourth straight session overnight. The tech-heavy index dropped 0.46% as a 6% plunge in Apple overshadowed Micron 's stronger-than-expected earnings.

SoftBank Group could remain under pressure after its chip designer Arm Holdings fell 3.2% overnight, underperforming the broader semiconductor sector even as AI-related stocks rebounded sharply.

Andrew Jackson, an equity strategist at Ortus Advisors, said investor enthusiasm for SoftBank may also be capped by reports that OpenAI could delay its initial public offering until next year as it struggles to secure demand at a $1 trillion valuation.

Qualcomm 's new AI data center chip deal with Meta is ultimately positive for Arm through royalty payments, Jackson added. However, Arm also faces growing competition as Qualcomm expands more aggressively into the central processing unit market.