In reviewTechnology29 March 2026

SOFTBANK to acquire DIGITALBRIDGE

Verified deal facts, source-backed narrative, and the Exit Mode founder lens for SME readers preparing to sell.

SOFTBANK acquires DIGITALBRIDGE

Deal facts

Buyer
SOFTBANK
Target
DIGITALBRIDGE
Deal value
Not disclosed
Announced
29 March 2026
Status
In review
Sector
Technology
Country
Not stated
Consideration
Not stated

Sources

What we know

SoftBank has agreed to acquire DigitalBridge in a transaction announced on 29 March 2026. The deal involves entities operating across diverse sectors including construction, financial services, information technology, and data processing activities. No specific financial value or consideration type was disclosed in the available records regarding the terms of this acquisition. The target company operates within a complex landscape of digital infrastructure and financial technology services.

The transaction remains in the regulatory review phase as of the latest update. Completion of the deal is pending further approvals and has not yet been finalised. This pending status indicates that the acquisition is currently undergoing necessary scrutiny before the transfer of ownership can be legally completed. The parties involved are expected to proceed with the transaction once all regulatory conditions are satisfied.

Weekly digest

Join Exit Mode Insider

Ten deal briefs a week, founder commentary, and the patterns worth paying attention to.

Join Exit Mode Insider, £12/mo

Deal timeline

1 update
  1. CMA invitation to comment

    SOFTBANK to acquire DIGITALBRIDGE

    SOFTBANK to acquire DIGITALBRIDGE

    EU DG COMP

Explore

Browse adjacent archives

Jump from this deal into the sector, buyer, deal type, and year views that carry the strongest contextual signal.

Similar deals

Similar deals

Other Technology M&A activity tracked by Exit Mode.

Buyer history

SOFTBANK

See every published Exit Mode archive entry where this buyer appears.

View buyer profile

Methodology

How this page is built

Layer 1 facts come from source documents, Layer 2 turns those facts into a readable narrative, and Layer 3 only appears where the editorial team flags a founder-relevant deal.

Back to the archive