topleft
topright
Enter the Member Network Zone View the Top 10 Points Leaderboard View Members Who Are Currently Online View Latest Member Activity

Featured Members


Member Network Zone

Expert Blog Comments

Why Innovation Falls Short at Microsoft - An Insider's View
Well most of the older people in the room remember when MS was an innovator and there certainly area...
Jonathan Schwartz Signs out at Sun
Talking about incomplete sentences... did you notice Schwartz tweeted his resignation? http://twitte...
Deloitte: 2010 Talent Forecast Calls for “Resume Tsunami”
Interesting findings. I would suspect that if there is a lot of job-hopping among IT workers once th...
Sun’s Schwartz Resigns on Twitter
As a former Sun shareholder I would have liked a positive return under Mr. Schwartz's (and Mr. McNea...
Do You Know Too Much For Your Own Good?
I have posited before that the proliferation of information has made knowledge incresingly obsolete....
Yahoo rejects Microsoft's bid Print E-mail

By Megan Davies and Michele Gershberg


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Yahoo Inc on Monday rejected as too low Microsoft Corp's unsolicited takeover offer, currently valued at $42 billion, putting the ball back in the software giant's court to pursue a deal.


In a statement, Yahoo said its board unanimously concluded the proposal was not in the best interests of its shareholders.


The company said the offer "substantially undervalues" its "global brand, large worldwide audience, significant recent investments in advertising platforms and future growth prospects, free cash flow and earnings potential, as well as our substantial unconsolidated investments."


Yahoo added that its board was evaluating all its strategic options.


Microsoft made the half-stock, half-cash offer on February 1. It was originally worth $44.6 billion, or $31 per share -- a 62 percent premium to Yahoo's stock price. Since then, Microsoft shares have fallen, and the deal is now worth $41.5 billion.


Microsoft now must decide whether to sweeten its offer, launch a proxy fight or simply withdraw.


"We think that Microsoft will likely increase its offer to $35/share and may go as high as $40," Sanford C. Bernstein said in a research note to clients on Monday.


While the firm's top Internet, media and technology analysts said they believed a negotiated settlement was likely, there was still a chance that "the Yahoo board is digging in for a fight ... and the situation will turn ugly."


Yahoo shares were up 2.1 percent at $29.81 in early Nasdaq trade.


If completed, a merger of Microsoft and Yahoo would be the world's largest of two computer technology companies and would create a formidable rival to Internet search and advertising leader Google Inc.


(Reporting by Megan Davies and Michele Gershberg; editing by Lisa Von Ahn and John Wallace)


(c) Reuters 2008. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by caching, framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters. Reuters and the Reuters sphere logo are registered trademarks and trademarks of the Reuters group of companies around the world.




Comment on this article
RSS comments

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.

 
< Previous   Next >




White Paper Library