SoftBank Group’s shares (SFTBY) climbed in trading after the company unveiled a major expansion into artificial intelligence infrastructure, signaling its ambition to become a key player in the rapidly growing AI cloud computing market.
The move centers on its upcoming Neo Cloud initiative, which will deliver large-scale GPU-based computing services designed for AI model training, inference, and advanced data processing.
The announcement comes as global demand for high-performance AI infrastructure continues to surge, driven by the expansion of generative AI systems and enterprise-level machine learning applications. Investors responded positively to the news, viewing it as a long-term growth catalyst for SoftBank’s technology and cloud business segments.
SoftBank Corp. confirmed plans to launch its “AI Data Center GPU Cloud” in October 2026 as part of its broader Neo Cloud business framework. In its internal terminology, Neo Cloud refers to a model where the company installs advanced computing chips and infrastructure within its own data centers and then offers that capacity as cloud-based services.
SoftBank Group Corp., SFTBY
The system will support AI workloads such as model training, inference processing, and large-scale data analytics. At the core of the infrastructure strategy is the deployment of high-performance GPUs, which are essential for modern AI systems.
The company also highlighted its proprietary software layer, Infrinia AI Cloud OS, which is designed to manage and optimize AI workloads across its data center network. This software stack is expected to play a key role in differentiating SoftBank’s cloud offering in a highly competitive environment.
SoftBank’s entry into the AI cloud market places it directly in competition with several major Japanese and regional technology firms that are aggressively scaling their own infrastructure capabilities.
Companies such as GMO Internet Group, KDDI, Highreso, Rutilea, and SAKURA Internet are all expanding GPU-based cloud services as demand for AI computing power accelerates. These firms are positioning themselves to capture enterprise demand for AI training infrastructure, particularly as businesses shift toward generative AI adoption.
The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) has also supported broader efforts to expand domestic computing capacity, including initiatives aimed at strengthening Japan’s position in global semiconductor and AI infrastructure supply chains. Nvidia has noted that these developments are part of a coordinated push to increase available compute resources across the country.
SoftBank has previously outlined plans to repurpose Sharp’s Sakai plant site in Osaka Prefecture into a large-scale AI data center hub. This facility is expected to serve both internal AI development needs and external enterprise clients once operational.
The project reflects SoftBank’s broader strategy of vertically integrating its AI ambitions—from infrastructure ownership to platform-level cloud services. By controlling both hardware deployment and software orchestration, the company aims to reduce dependency on external cloud providers while capturing higher-margin AI workloads.
The company has also indicated collaboration with Nvidia in developing AI supercomputing systems based on the Blackwell architecture. These next-generation GPUs are expected to significantly enhance training speed and efficiency for large AI models, positioning SoftBank to compete in the top tier of global AI infrastructure providers.
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