By Echo Wang
Feb 27 (Reuters) – A group of global investors including Qatar Holdings, an investment arm of Qatar Investment Authority, Visa and Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, is preparing to โinvest more than $200 million as cornerstone investors in the U.S. initial public offering by SoftBank’s โPayPay, according to two people familiar with the matter.
PayPay, a Japanese digital payments provider, is targeting a valuation of up to $14 โbillion in the offering, one of the people said, in what could be the biggest listing for a Japanese company on a U.S. stock exchange.
The source declined to be identified as the information had not been publicly disclosed. The sources cautioned that no final commitment has been made, and the size, terms of the โpotential cornerstone investments and the valuation โ of the deal are being discussed and could change.
PayPay plans to list on the Nasdaq next month, one of the people said, adding SoftBank hopes that bringing โ cornerstone investors on board will boost the IPOโs appeal. The IPO was initially expected in December, but was delayed by a prolonged U.S. government shutdown that slowed the regulatory process.
PayPay, SoftBank, Qatar Holdings, Visa and ADIA did not โimmediately respond โto requests for comment.
Reuters first reported over two years โago that SoftBank was considering a U.S. โlisting for PayPay.
SOFTBANK GENERATING FUNDS FOR AI SPENDING
The planned IPO of PayPay comes at a pivotal moment for SoftBank Group, which has gone all-in on artificial intelligence. The Japanese conglomerate has committed $30 billion to OpenAI, building on a roughly $41 billion investment it said it completed in December for an estimated 11% stake, Reuters reported. To help fund its AI investments, CEO Masayoshi Son has sold billions of dollars’ worth of assets, โincluding the companyโs $5.8 billion stake in Nvidia and $4.8 billion of T-Mobile U.S. โshares. The PayPay listing – the first U.S. listing for a โSoftBank-majority business since Arm Holdings – could provide โa timely cash boost for the conglomerate.
Earlier this month, PayPay said it had entered โa partnership with Visa, as the Japanese โpayments company seeks to expand โinto the U.S.
Jointly formed by SoftBank and Yahoo Japan in 2018, PayPay has helped accelerate Japan’s digital transformation, encouraging consumers to move away from cash by offering rebates on payments through โits mobile app. Just over seven โyears since its founding, PayPay has rapidly expanded and grown into one of Japan’s most โwidely used payment platforms, amassing roughly 72 million registered users as of December 31.
(Reporting โby Echo Wang in New YorkEditing by Rod Nickel)