LOS ANGELES, Dec. 1 (Xinhua) -- A press report
stating that Microsoft has restarted talks to buy Yahoo's search business for 20
billion U.S. dollars "has no basis in fact," the San Francisco Chronicle said on
Monday.
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A Yahoo! sign is seen in New York's
Times Square November 18, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
The Times of London reported on Sunday that the deal
under discussion would put former AOL CEO Jonathan Miller and Ross Levinsohn, a
former president of Fox Interactive Media, in charge of Yahoo. The report, which
cited no sources, also said executives at both companies had agreed to the broad
terms of a deal.
In fact, there are no current talks between the two
companies, The Chronicle quoted an executive at one of the firms who requested
anonymity as saying.
Furthermore, the 20-billion-dollar price cited in the
Times of London article for Yahoo's search business appears questionable given
that the market capitalization for all of Yahoo is 16 billion dollars, said The
Chronicle.
Yahoo and Microsoft had had on-again, off-again talks
over several months earlier this year about a 47.5-billion-dollar takeover, and
later a proposal focused only on Yahoo's search business. Discussions regarding
both scenarios collapsed without an agreement.
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer has said repeatedly that
he is no longer interested in buying all of Yahoo, but that he is open to some
sort of partnership involving their respective search businesses.
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Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer speaks to
shareholders at the Microsoft annual shareholders meeting in Bellevue,
Washington, November 19, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Brad Williams, a Yahoo spokesman, said Sunday "We
don't comment on rumors." Frank Shaw, a Microsoft spokesman, declined to
comment.
Yahoo's shares have plummeted since Microsoft
withdrew its 33-dollar-a-share acquisition offer earlier this year, eliciting
speculation that discussions would eventually resume. Yahoo's shares closed
Friday at 11.51 dollars, nearly one-third of the original offer.
Microsoft CEO rules out another bid to
buyout Yahoo
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 7
(Xinhua) -- Microsoft Corp. Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer has said his
company would not make another bid to buyout Internet firm Yahoo, it was
reported on Friday.
"We made an offer, we made another offer, and it was clear
that Yahoo didn't want to sell the business to us and we moved on," said
Ballmer, quoted by the Wall Street Journal. Full story