The Japanese telecommunications and Internet-services company, which recently invested in two Indian technology companies, reported today a fiscal second quarter profit of 483.1 billion yen (USD 4.3 billion), up from 165.8 billion yen a year earlier.
Quarterly sales surged 23 per cent to 2.11 trillion yen (USD 18.7 billion).
Softbank, the first to sell the iPhone in Japan, has widespread global investments including Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba, which listed in New York earlier this year after a record-busting stock sale.
One sore spot is Sprint, which Softbank bought a majority stake in earlier this year. It said costs from layoffs at Sprint will total 17 billion yen (USD 150 million).
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Sprint is eliminating 2,000 jobs, or about 5 per cent of its staff, to cut USD 1.5 billion in annual spending.
Overland Park, Kansas-based Sprint, which announced a separate round of job cuts in early October, reported a USD 765 million loss for the quarter. But Softbank is eyeing Sprint as a long-term investment.
"We are heading toward a turnaround," said Softbank founder and chief executive Masayoshi Son, noting that Sprint's new chief executive, Marcelo Claure, tapped from cellphone distributor and Softbank unit Brightstar, was achieving results.
He compared his approach to valuing, instead of killing, the goose that lays golden eggs, depicted in Aesop Fables, but warning that patience was needed.
"I've long said that whoever rules China will rule the world," he said. China has overtaken Japan as the world's second biggest economy and will in the future grow bigger than the American economy, Son said.
But he said the place to watch next is India, where the population is young, English-speaking and boasts excellent software engineers, praising Snapdeal as India's equivalent of Alibaba.
Another company in which Softbank is a stakeholder, Yahoo Japan, has switched its electronic commerce style to more like Alibaba's, a move that has proved a success, he said.