Business World

Microsoft says willing to restart Yahoo talks

Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) said on Monday it would be willing to reopen talks to buy all or part of Yahoo Inc (YHOO.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), but only if a new Yahoo board is elected — a big boost for financier Carl Icahn’s board slate.

Microsoft, which broke off months-long talks in early May to buy the Internet company for $47.5 billion, said it would resume talks immediately if a new board were elected at Yahoo’s August 1 stockholder meeting. Yahoo shares leapt 12 percent.

The Microsoft statement came after Icahn, a billionaire who owns more than 4 percent of Yahoo, issued an open letter saying he had “spoken frequently” to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer over the last week. Previously, the two had not spoken.

“This is the first concrete confirmation we have that Microsoft is willing to come back to the table,” UBS analyst Ben Schachter said. “It gives Icahn a much stronger hand going into the shareholder vote. It significantly raises his profile and his likelihood for success.”

Ballmer told Icahn that a big impediment to any Yahoo deal was his concern that the current board could “mismanage” the company while the deal awaits regulatory approval, a process that could take nine months or more, according to Icahn.

In an interview, Icahn argued that his proposed dissident board slate would make Microsoft feel more secure in risking a large sum of capital to complete the deal during the regulatory approval process.

“You don’t have to be Sherlock Holmes to realize there is no great comfort zone between the current Yahoo board and Microsoft,” Icahn said guaranteed cash advance. “During this waiting period for regulatory approval, any acquirer — not just Microsoft — would want a steward they would feel comfortable with.”

In response, Yahoo issued a statement saying it continues to be willing to reopen talks with Microsoft, but “we feel strongly” that any deal negotiated between Icahn and Microsoft “would not lead to an outcome that would be in the best interests of Yahoo stockholders.” 

Read more

Dieser Beitrag wurde am Tuesday, 08. July 2008 um 17:36 Uhr veröffentlicht und wurde unter der Kategorie online abgelegt. Du kannst die Kommentare zu diesen Eintrag durch den RSS-Feed verfolgen.

« Japan Economy Will Keep Growing, BOJ – Mutual fund pioneer, John Templeton, dies at 95 »

No Comments

No comments yet.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

 

Powered by WordPress -- XHTML 1.0