Navneet Govil, the chief financial officer of SoftBank Group's Vision Fund investing arm, is leaving the company after a decade. His departure comes as the Japanese conglomerate pivots its investment strategy toward artificial intelligence, including its multibillion-dollar bet on OpenAI.
Navneet Govil, CFO of SoftBank Investment Advisors, is leaving after 10 years at the Japanese conglomerate, according to an internal memo reviewed by Reuters.
"We thank Navneet for his contributions over the past decade and wish him well in his future endeavors," Alex Clavel, CEO of SoftBank Investment Advisors, wrote in the memo. Transition responsibilities will be shared in due course, he added.
Govil joined SoftBank in 2016, a year before the launch of the first Vision Fund, which upended startup investing with high-conviction bets. The $100 billion fund backed companies including Uber Technologies Inc., DoorDash Inc. and WeWork. While some investments proved profitable, others — including office-sharing firm WeWork, which filed for bankruptcy in 2023 — soured as market conditions shifted. The Vision Fund has since undergone layoffs and restructuring as founder and Chief Executive Officer Masayoshi Son redirected focus toward AI-related companies.
Vision Fund 2, launched in 2019 to back earlier-stage technology startups, has become the holding entity for SoftBank's oversized bet on ChatGPT-maker OpenAI. SoftBank has committed billions to AI infrastructure and data center buildouts, positioning the Vision Fund as a primary vehicle for those investments. The fund's CFO role will be critical in managing capital allocation and investor relations as the firm navigates its transition from a broad-based tech investor to a focused AI bettor.
The departure marks the latest in a series of leadership changes at the Vision Fund, which has narrowed its investment scope after posting billions in losses during the 2022 tech downturn. SoftBank Group shares (TYO: 9984) have gained more than 10% this week during a broader rally in Asian tech stocks, though the stock remains sensitive to developments around its Vision Fund portfolio and Arm Holdings, the chip designer it controls.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.