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SoftBank Bets $4 Billion on AI Infrastructure with DigitalBridge Acquisition

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
SoftBank Group is acquiring DigitalBridge Group for $4 billion in cash as part of its ambitious push to build the physical backbone for artificial intelligence. The deal values DigitalBridge at $16 per share and marks a major bet on next-generation data centers and digital infrastructure.

SoftBank Group Corp. (SFTBF) (SFTBY) announced Monday that it's writing a $4 billion check to acquire DigitalBridge Group Inc. (DBRG), deepening its already substantial investments in the physical infrastructure that powers artificial intelligence. If you're wondering what AI has to do with buying a company that manages data centers and cell towers, well, that's exactly the point.

The deal is straightforward: SoftBank will pay $16.00 per share in cash for all outstanding DigitalBridge stock. That's a 15% premium over where the stock closed on December 26, and a hefty 50% premium compared to its average closing price over the past 52 weeks before deal rumors started swirling on December 4. For a company that manages digital infrastructure assets—think data centers, fiber networks, cell towers, and edge computing facilities—that's a meaningful vote of confidence.

Why SoftBank Wants to Own the Plumbing

SoftBank's CEO Masayoshi Son has been talking up artificial superintelligence (ASI) for months now, and this acquisition fits squarely into that vision. Training massive AI models requires massive amounts of computing power, which requires massive data centers, which require connectivity, power, and physical space. You can't run the future on vibes alone.

"As AI transforms industries worldwide, we need more compute, connectivity, power, and scalable infrastructure," Son said in a statement announcing the deal. "DigitalBridge is a leader in digital infrastructure, and this acquisition will strengthen the foundation for next-generation AI data centers."

Translation: if you believe AI is going to eat the world, you probably want to own the pipes, towers, and server farms that make it possible. DigitalBridge, as a global alternative asset manager focused on digital infrastructure, gives SoftBank exactly that foothold.

What DigitalBridge Gets Out of This

DigitalBridge CEO Marc Ganzi seems pretty pleased with the arrangement. The deal pairs his company with a long-term investor who has both deep pockets and a laser focus on digital infrastructure. "Their vision, capital strength, and global network will allow us to accelerate our mission," Ganzi said.

And unlike many acquisitions where the target gets absorbed and dismantled, DigitalBridge will continue operating as a separately managed platform under Ganzi's leadership. That's probably reassuring if you're one of the employees or investors who've spent years building up the company's portfolio of critical digital assets.

The Numbers and the Timeline

The transaction gives DigitalBridge an enterprise value of approximately $4 billion. DigitalBridge's board unanimously approved the deal after getting a thumbs-up from a special committee of independent directors, which is the kind of corporate governance box-checking you'd expect in a transaction this size.

The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2026, assuming regulators don't throw up any roadblocks. Once it's done, SoftBank says the acquisition will enhance its ability to finance and scale AI-focused digital infrastructure on a global basis.

Market Reaction

Investors clearly liked what they heard. DigitalBridge (DBRG) shares jumped 9.77% to $15.28 on Monday following the announcement, trading close to the stock's 52-week high of $15.55. That's still a bit below the $16.00 offer price, which is typical—there's always some discount for deal risk until the transaction actually closes.

For SoftBank, this is the latest move in a broader strategy to position itself at the center of the AI infrastructure buildout. Whether that pays off depends on whether the AI boom continues to justify the enormous capital investments flowing into data centers and computing capacity. But if you're Masayoshi Son, you're clearly betting it will.

SoftBank Bets $4 Billion on AI Infrastructure with DigitalBridge Acquisition

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
SoftBank Group is acquiring DigitalBridge Group for $4 billion in cash as part of its ambitious push to build the physical backbone for artificial intelligence. The deal values DigitalBridge at $16 per share and marks a major bet on next-generation data centers and digital infrastructure.

SoftBank Group Corp. (SFTBF) (SFTBY) announced Monday that it's writing a $4 billion check to acquire DigitalBridge Group Inc. (DBRG), deepening its already substantial investments in the physical infrastructure that powers artificial intelligence. If you're wondering what AI has to do with buying a company that manages data centers and cell towers, well, that's exactly the point.

The deal is straightforward: SoftBank will pay $16.00 per share in cash for all outstanding DigitalBridge stock. That's a 15% premium over where the stock closed on December 26, and a hefty 50% premium compared to its average closing price over the past 52 weeks before deal rumors started swirling on December 4. For a company that manages digital infrastructure assets—think data centers, fiber networks, cell towers, and edge computing facilities—that's a meaningful vote of confidence.

Why SoftBank Wants to Own the Plumbing

SoftBank's CEO Masayoshi Son has been talking up artificial superintelligence (ASI) for months now, and this acquisition fits squarely into that vision. Training massive AI models requires massive amounts of computing power, which requires massive data centers, which require connectivity, power, and physical space. You can't run the future on vibes alone.

"As AI transforms industries worldwide, we need more compute, connectivity, power, and scalable infrastructure," Son said in a statement announcing the deal. "DigitalBridge is a leader in digital infrastructure, and this acquisition will strengthen the foundation for next-generation AI data centers."

Translation: if you believe AI is going to eat the world, you probably want to own the pipes, towers, and server farms that make it possible. DigitalBridge, as a global alternative asset manager focused on digital infrastructure, gives SoftBank exactly that foothold.

What DigitalBridge Gets Out of This

DigitalBridge CEO Marc Ganzi seems pretty pleased with the arrangement. The deal pairs his company with a long-term investor who has both deep pockets and a laser focus on digital infrastructure. "Their vision, capital strength, and global network will allow us to accelerate our mission," Ganzi said.

And unlike many acquisitions where the target gets absorbed and dismantled, DigitalBridge will continue operating as a separately managed platform under Ganzi's leadership. That's probably reassuring if you're one of the employees or investors who've spent years building up the company's portfolio of critical digital assets.

The Numbers and the Timeline

The transaction gives DigitalBridge an enterprise value of approximately $4 billion. DigitalBridge's board unanimously approved the deal after getting a thumbs-up from a special committee of independent directors, which is the kind of corporate governance box-checking you'd expect in a transaction this size.

The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2026, assuming regulators don't throw up any roadblocks. Once it's done, SoftBank says the acquisition will enhance its ability to finance and scale AI-focused digital infrastructure on a global basis.

Market Reaction

Investors clearly liked what they heard. DigitalBridge (DBRG) shares jumped 9.77% to $15.28 on Monday following the announcement, trading close to the stock's 52-week high of $15.55. That's still a bit below the $16.00 offer price, which is typical—there's always some discount for deal risk until the transaction actually closes.

For SoftBank, this is the latest move in a broader strategy to position itself at the center of the AI infrastructure buildout. Whether that pays off depends on whether the AI boom continues to justify the enormous capital investments flowing into data centers and computing capacity. But if you're Masayoshi Son, you're clearly betting it will.