Japan's Tech Titans Just Teamed Up to Build a Trillion-Parameter AI—And It's Not Here to Chat

In brief

  • SoftBank, NEC, Honda, and Sony each took 10%+ in a new AI development company, joined by major banks and steelmakers.
  • The company’s trillion-parameter model targets Physical AI—robots, autonomous vehicles, and industrial machines—not conversational chatbots.
  • Japan’s government NEDO agency has earmarked ¥1 trillion (~$6.7B) over five years, with Japanese data kept domestic and off foreign cloud infrastructure.

Japan isn’t interested in building the next ChatGPT. On Sunday, SoftBank, NEC, Honda, and Sony Group jointly formed a new company with one goal: build a trillion-parameter AI model that runs machines, not conversations. The move is a direct bet on what the community refers to as “Physical AI”: the idea that the next frontier isn’t language models that write your emails, but AI systems that control a robot arm, drive a car, or run a factory floor. Japan, with its deep industrial base and decades of robotics heritage, thinks it has a natural edge that Silicon Valley and Beijing can’t easily replicate.

Based on reports, SoftBank and NEC will lead the actual AI development. Honda will deploy the results in autonomous driving. Sony brings robotics and gaming hardware to the table. Preferred Networks, a respected Tokyo-based AI developer, is also involved. The company, which roughly translates in English to “Japan AI Foundation Model Development,” plans to hire around 100 AI engineers, with a SoftBank executive named as president. Banks and steelmakers showed up too. Nippon Steel, Kobe Steel, MUFG Bank, Sumitomo Mitsui Banking, and Mizuho Bank are all listed as investors, so this is much bigger than a simple tech startup.  The government money will flow through NEDO, a national R&D agency that has earmarked roughly ¥1 trillion—about $6.28 billion—in AI support over five years starting fiscal 2026. Japan AI Foundation Model Development is expected to apply and is considered a near-certain pick.

Japan has spent years sending its data to U.S. cloud infrastructure and paying for the privilege—the so-called “digital deficit” that has drained capital and left Japanese industry dependent on foreign tech stacks. The new company wants AI trained on Japanese data, staying in Japan, not feeding OpenAI or Google’s pipelines. That makes for a pointed contrast with SoftBank’s own global moves. The firm led OpenAI’s $40 billion funding round in 2025, and now it’s on the other side of the table—anchoring a domestic model meant to chart a path independent of the same American AI ecosystem it’s been bankrolling. Physical AI is heating up globally and big companies are starting to pay attention. Tesla is building its own robots, OpenAI is also supporting AI/robotics startups and China’s own political plans include massive investments in this area. Earlier this year, leading stablecoin company Tether invested in humanoid robotics startup Generative Bionics, which markets its machines as “Physical AI” systems designed to fuse robotics with intelligence that perceives and acts in the world—not just responds to prompts. The target for practical Physical AI applications is 2030, according to local reports. NEDO began accepting proposals for the funding program in late March—meaning the clock is already running.

Disclaimer: The information on this page may come from third parties and does not represent the views or opinions of Gate. The content displayed on this page is for reference only and does not constitute any financial, investment, or legal advice. Gate does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information and shall not be liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Virtual asset investments carry high risks and are subject to significant price volatility. You may lose all of your invested principal. Please fully understand the relevant risks and make prudent decisions based on your own financial situation and risk tolerance. For details, please refer to Disclaimer.

Related Articles

CoreWeave Inks $6 Billion AI Cloud Computing Deal with Jane Street

CoreWeave has secured a $6 billion deal with Jane Street for AI cloud services, which includes a $1 billion investment in CoreWeave stock. The transition to AI cloud infrastructure has positioned CoreWeave as a leader in the sector.

GateNews57m ago

Google launches Gemini 3.1 Flash TTS: Supports 70 languages and scenario directors, making AI voices more natural

Google AI announces the release of Gemini 3.1 Flash TTS, a text-to-speech model that supports 70 languages, with new features such as scene direction, speaker-level control, and audio tags. Compared with its predecessor, Gemini 3.1 improves the naturalness and expressiveness of voices, and can be used via Google AI Studio or the Gemini API for a wide range of application scenarios.

ChainNewsAbmedia1h ago

DownDetector Reports Claude Users Experiencing Service Issues

Gate News message, April 15 — DownDetector, a network status monitoring website, has recorded user reports indicating that Claude, an AI assistant, is experiencing service issues.

GateNews11h ago

Allbirds Raises $50M via Convertible Bonds, Pivots to AI Infrastructure as NewBird AI

Allbirds has raised $50 million through convertible bonds and will transition from footwear retail to AI computing, rebranding as NewBird AI to reflect its new mission.

GateNews12h ago

OpenAI Plans New Pricing for ChatGPT Ads, Exploring Additional Upgrades

Gate News message, April 15 — OpenAI is planning to introduce new pricing for ChatGPT advertisements and exploring other upgrade options, according to The Information.

GateNews12h ago

AI Startup Hilbert Raises $28M in Series A Led by Andreessen Horowitz

Hilbert, an AI startup, has raised $28 million in a Series A round led by Andreessen Horowitz to assist businesses in automating decisions for growth and improving AI investments' effectiveness.

GateNews13h ago
Comment
0/400
No comments