 |
|
Jerry Yang, Yahoo CEO and co-founder,
speaks during a keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in
Las Vegas, Nevada, Jan. 7, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters
File Photo) Photo
Gallery>>> |
BEIJING, May 6 (Xinhuanet) -- Jerry Yang, Yahoo's
co-founder and chief executive, revealed Monday conflicting approaches in his
company towards Microsoft's surprise bid to buy his company and the
three-month business saga that ensued.
Yang said he was open to selling Yahoo to
Microsoft all along, but that Steven A. Ballmer, Microsoft¡¯s chief executive,
and his dealmakers ultimately declined to negotiate and withdrew their proposal
on Saturday with little explanation.
 |
|
The Yahoo headquarters in Sunnyvale,
California.(Xinhua/AFP File Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
|
"They chose to walk away after we put a price on the
table, and they didn't want to negotiate," Yang said. "From my perspective,
we were open all along to selling to Microsoft. We just feel Yahoo, either
standalone or with Microsoft, is worth more than what they put on the table."
Yang's account conflicts with that of Microsoft's
advisors and executives. They have said that they received no counteroffer from
Yahoo for three months, after Microsoft's deadline to consummate the deal had
expired. They also said that Yang and his board offered various prices of
37 U.S. dollars a share or above and ultimately refused to budge on
those numbers.
Microsoft had raised its initial bid to 33 U.S.
dollars a share when Yang and his co-founder, David Filo, met
with Ballmer and other Microsoft executives at the Seattle airport on
Saturday. The Yahoo founders said their board had authorized an acquisition at
37 U.S. dollars a share.
 |
|
Microsoft announced an unexpected
44.6-billion-dollar bid for Yahoo Friday, as a latest move by the software
giant to challenge Google's dominance of the lucrative online search and
advertising markets.(Xinhua/Reuters File Photo) Photo Gallery>>>
|
After that meeting, Ballmer made public a letter
to Yang withdrawing the offer and expressing disappointment that Yahoo did
not move toward accepting it.
In the interview Monday, Yang and Roy Bostock,
Yahoo's chairman, said they were negotiating in good faith and that throughout
the process they were open and receptive to a merger with Microsoft. Yang
also said he spent personal time alone with Ballmer but that they were
ultimately unable to bridge their differences.
Yang also looked ahead to the daunting task of
guiding Yahoo¡¯s growth as an independent company.
"I feel like we now have the task to continue to
build shareholder value," he said. "This is just creating another set of
challenges we have to overcome as a company. We have to show the world the
opportunity that we have been talking about for the last three months."
Yang, who took control of the company he co-founded
last June after the departure of the prior chief, Terry Semel, is now under
enormous pressure to raise Yahoo's stock price. In reaction to the deal
falling through, Yahoo's stock fell almost 15 percent on Monday to 24.47 U.S.
dollars.
Yang argued that the Microsoft's bid had opened up
new doors for Yahoo. "We feel Microsoft approaching us has created an
opportunity for us talk to just about anybody and everybody in the industry," he
said. He said the company would do new deals "in a way that ensures that it's
the right thing to do for Yahoo, and not because of some time pressure."
"Anything we might do with Google would allow us to
maintain the ability to compete in what is important to us," Yang said.
Yang declined to say whether such a deal with Google
was imminent.
Yahoo might also consider possible tie-ups with AOL,
a division of Time Warner, and MySpace, a division of News Corp., though
shareholders and analysts seem unenthusiastic about those options. Yang
would not address speculation about those deals.
He did want to address what he said was a
misconception: that Yahoo executives celebrated the news of Microsoft's
withdrawal and viewed it as a victory. "I was not witness to any celebration and
we do not consider it a victory. I would have been personally very happy to do a
deal with Microsoft," he said.
At least, Yang has impressed some in the
industry with his gumption in rejecting the most highly capitalized technology
company on the planet.
(Agencies)
Yahoo shares tumble on scrapped bid
BEIJING, May 6 -- Yahoo Inc, the Web company that spent
three months fighting a takeover by Microsoft Corp, fell 21 percent in early
trading after the software maker scrapped the bid because executives failed to
agree on the price.
Citigroup Inc and ThinkPanmure LLC analysts cut their
ratings on Yahoo's stock to "sell" after Microsoft withdrew its bid. Microsoft
said this weekend it walked away when Yahoo demanded 37 U.S. dollars a share
after the 44.6 billion dollars bid was raised by about 5 billion dollars to 33
dolalrs a share. Full story
Withdrawal puts pressure on
Ballmer
BEIJING, May 6 -- Microsoft Corp's decision to drop its
pursuit of Yahoo Inc increases the pressure on Chief Executive Officer Steve
Ballmer to make his money-losing Internet business succeed against Google
Inc.
Ballmer's bid for Yahoo, the most-visited website,
signaled that Microsoft was making little progress against Google in Internet
search advertising, said Charles Di Bona, a Sanford C. Bernstein analyst.
Ballmer withdrew his bid over the weekend after Yahoo refused a sweetened offer
of almost $50 billion in stock, leaving investors asking what his online
strategy will be. Full story
Yahoo's CEO says no to Microsoft,
shareholders irate
BEIJING, May 5 (Xinhuanet) -- By rejecting Microsoft's
47.5 billion U.S. dollar offer, Yahoo Inc. Chief Executive Jerry Yang will get a
chance to prove his plan to right the Internet giant is working -- if
disgruntled shareholders don't throw him to the wolves first.
Many analysts believe Yahoo's stock price, which had
advance almost 50 percent since Microsoft's initial offer, will give up most, if
not all, of that gain, leaving the Sunnyvale-based company's market value around
30 billion dollars. Full story
Yahoo: what's next after Microsoft
withdraws?
BEIJING, May 5 (Xinhuanet) -- Yahoo Inc faced growing
pressure on Sunday to find an alternative strategy to Microsoft Corp's 47.5
billion U.S. dollar takeover offer after the software maker withdrew over a
disagreement on price.
Yahoo shares could fall by more than 30 percent on Monday
over the breakdown of talks, but that drop could be softened if Wall Street
believes Yahoo Chief Executive Jerry Yang has another strategy up his sleeve,
analysts said. Full story
Wall Street retreats as Microsoft
withdraws Yahoo bid
NEW YORK, May 5 (Xinhua) -- Wall Street retreated Monday
as Microsoft Corp. withdrew its bid for Yahoo Inc. and oil prices topped 120
U.S. dollars.
Microsoft withdrew its offer of 43.7 billion dollars to
buy Yahoo Inc. Saturday after the Internet provider refused the price. Full story