SoftBank Group has filed a public tender offer with France's Autorité des Marchés Financiers to acquire BALYO SA, the Paris-listed warehouse robotics manufacturer. BALYO's board responded by forming an ad hoc committee of two independent directors — Juliette Favre and Yasmine Fage — and issued a favorable endorsement of the proposal. No price has been disclosed in the initial AMF filing.
BALYO manufactures autonomous guided vehicles for warehouse and distribution centers, a sector that saw $4.2 billion in global deal volume in 2024 according to PitchBook. The company employs roughly 180 people and reported €27.3 million in revenue for fiscal 2023, down 14% year-over-year as supply chain normalization reduced customer urgency. SoftBank already holds a minority stake in BALYO through its Vision Fund 2 vehicle, acquired in a €15 million equity injection in late 2021 when the French firm was trading near multi-year lows.
The timing reflects SoftBank's pattern of converting minority stakes into full acquisitions when valuations compress. BALYO's market capitalization sits at approximately €42 million as of last Friday's close, less than half its 2020 peak. SoftBank has deployed this consolidation playbook across robotics holdings: Boston Dynamics acquired in 2017 for $100 million, then sold to Hyundai in 2020 at an 80% markup before retaining board influence. The Vision Fund's industrial automation vertical now holds stakes or control positions in 11 companies, including AutoStore, Berkshire Grey, and Symbotic.
For allocators, this signals two dynamics. First, SoftBank is moving back into control deals after two years of portfolio rationalization — the fund divested $28 billion in public holdings in 2023 to stabilize its balance sheet. A tender for BALYO suggests liquidity has returned and Masayoshi Son's team sees margin upside in European industrials trading below replacement cost. Second, the warehouse automation sector remains fragmented despite consolidation pressure. BALYO competes with AGV makers Linde Material Handling, Toyota Material Handling, and Jungheinrich, none of which have announced inbound M&A in the past 18 months. A SoftBank-backed rollup would shift competitive intensity.
The AMF review period runs 25 trading days from the December 4 filing, placing clearance in early January assuming no extensions. BALYO shareholders will see formal pricing within 10 business days once the AMF publishes its draft decision. Watch for minority squeeze-out mechanics if SoftBank's offer clears 90% acceptance — French tender rules allow mandatory buyouts at that threshold, and Vision Fund historically pushes for full control to avoid public reporting friction.
SoftBank's filing arrives as European robotics valuations sit 22% below their five-year median on an EV-to-sales basis, compressed by rising capital costs and U.S. tariff uncertainty on Chinese components. BALYO sources 68% of its drivetrain modules from Shenzhen suppliers.