<p>Japan's SoftBank Group on Monday reported a record quarterly net loss of $23.4 billion, after central bank interest rate hikes caused tech shares to tank.</p>.<p>The telecoms firm that has turned into an investment behemoth posted a net loss of 3.16 trillion yen, nose-diving from a net profit of 761.5 billion yen in the same April-June period the previous year.</p>.<p>A weaker yen and the "global downward trend in share prices due to growing concerns over economic recession driven by inflation and rising interest rates" contributed to the slump, it said.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read—<a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/asia-shares-subdued-dollar-encouraged-by-us-rate-risk-1134138.html" target="_blank">Asia shares subdued, dollar encouraged by US rate risk</a></strong></p>.<p>Among its portfolio companies that suffered large losses for the quarter were South Korean e-commerce giant Coupang and US meal delivery platform DoorDash, SoftBank added.</p>.<p>SoftBank's big stakes in global tech giants and volatile new ventures have made for unpredictable earnings, and it has lurched between record highs and lows in recent years.</p>.<p>In May, it reported its worst-ever full-year net loss -- and a then-record quarterly loss for Q4 -- after a bruising year in 2021-22 that saw its assets hit by a US tech share rout and a regulatory crackdown in China.</p>.<p>That came after logging Japan's biggest-ever annual net profit in 2020-21, after people moved their lives online during the pandemic, sending tech stocks soaring.</p>.<p>And in 2019-20, SoftBank Group reported a then-record annual net loss of 961.6 billion yen, as the emergence of Covid-19 compounded woes caused by its investment in troubled office-sharing start-up WeWork.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read—<a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/edtech-platform-upgrad-bucks-trend-raises-rs-1670-crore-1134178.html" target="_blank">Edtech platform upGrad bucks trend, raises Rs 1,670 crore</a></strong></p>.<p>Hideki Yasuda, senior analyst at Toyo Securities, told AFP the company "cannot help" big losses, "because the market is down".</p>.<p>The company "faces a very tough situation in the immediate term", Yasuda said before the earnings announcement.</p>.<p>"They have to wait for the market to rebound. You have to look at the company through the lens of long-term investment. It may experience one or two bad years, but over a decade or more, the world economy will keep growing and it could grow further."</p>.<p>The US Federal Reserve and many other central banks have announced aggressive rate increases aimed at battling sky-high inflation linked to the Ukraine war and Covid-related supply chain woes.</p>.<p>But going against the grain, the Bank of Japan has stuck to its long-held monetary easing policies because it sees the latest price hikes as temporary.</p>.<p>This has pushed Japan's currency down to 24-year lows against the dollar in recent months, driving down the yen value of SoftBank's investments.</p>
<p>Japan's SoftBank Group on Monday reported a record quarterly net loss of $23.4 billion, after central bank interest rate hikes caused tech shares to tank.</p>.<p>The telecoms firm that has turned into an investment behemoth posted a net loss of 3.16 trillion yen, nose-diving from a net profit of 761.5 billion yen in the same April-June period the previous year.</p>.<p>A weaker yen and the "global downward trend in share prices due to growing concerns over economic recession driven by inflation and rising interest rates" contributed to the slump, it said.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read—<a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/asia-shares-subdued-dollar-encouraged-by-us-rate-risk-1134138.html" target="_blank">Asia shares subdued, dollar encouraged by US rate risk</a></strong></p>.<p>Among its portfolio companies that suffered large losses for the quarter were South Korean e-commerce giant Coupang and US meal delivery platform DoorDash, SoftBank added.</p>.<p>SoftBank's big stakes in global tech giants and volatile new ventures have made for unpredictable earnings, and it has lurched between record highs and lows in recent years.</p>.<p>In May, it reported its worst-ever full-year net loss -- and a then-record quarterly loss for Q4 -- after a bruising year in 2021-22 that saw its assets hit by a US tech share rout and a regulatory crackdown in China.</p>.<p>That came after logging Japan's biggest-ever annual net profit in 2020-21, after people moved their lives online during the pandemic, sending tech stocks soaring.</p>.<p>And in 2019-20, SoftBank Group reported a then-record annual net loss of 961.6 billion yen, as the emergence of Covid-19 compounded woes caused by its investment in troubled office-sharing start-up WeWork.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read—<a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/business/business-news/edtech-platform-upgrad-bucks-trend-raises-rs-1670-crore-1134178.html" target="_blank">Edtech platform upGrad bucks trend, raises Rs 1,670 crore</a></strong></p>.<p>Hideki Yasuda, senior analyst at Toyo Securities, told AFP the company "cannot help" big losses, "because the market is down".</p>.<p>The company "faces a very tough situation in the immediate term", Yasuda said before the earnings announcement.</p>.<p>"They have to wait for the market to rebound. You have to look at the company through the lens of long-term investment. It may experience one or two bad years, but over a decade or more, the world economy will keep growing and it could grow further."</p>.<p>The US Federal Reserve and many other central banks have announced aggressive rate increases aimed at battling sky-high inflation linked to the Ukraine war and Covid-related supply chain woes.</p>.<p>But going against the grain, the Bank of Japan has stuck to its long-held monetary easing policies because it sees the latest price hikes as temporary.</p>.<p>This has pushed Japan's currency down to 24-year lows against the dollar in recent months, driving down the yen value of SoftBank's investments.</p>