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Friday 1 February 2008

Microsoft Offers to Buy Yahoo for $44.6 Billion

Microsoft Corp., the world's biggest software maker, made an unsolicited $44.6 billion offer for Yahoo! Inc. to challenge Google Inc.'s dominance in Internet search services and advertising.
The $31-a-share bid of cash or Microsoft stock is 62 percent more than Yahoo's closing price yesterday. Before today, Yahoo had dropped 18 percent this year in Nasdaq Stock Market trading, and this week posted a 23 percent profit decline for the fourth quarter.
Microsoft Chief Executive Officer Steve Ballmer is attempting the biggest-ever technology takeover after failing to compete with Google in a market that may almost double to $80 billion by 2010. Google has grown faster than Microsoft in every quarter since Google's 2004 initial public offering as its search engine won more users.
``Microsoft is under massive pressure to expand its Internet business to fend off competition from rivals such as Google and this deal shows how desperate they are,'' said Thomas Radinger, a fund manager at Pioneer Investments in Munich, which oversees about $95 billion, including Microsoft shares. ``It's a huge gamble as the price is very steep and it will take years to successfully integrate such a massive acquisition.''
Yahoo rose 51 percent to $28.90 in early trading after closing at $19.18 yesterday. Microsoft, based in Redmond, Washington, fell $1.30 to $31.30 after closing at $32.60 yesterday in Nasdaq trading. Google fell 6 percent to $530.51.
Yahoo, based in Sunnyvale, California, said today that it plans to evaluate the proposal ``promptly.''
Yahoo's Stumble
Yahoo's inability to crack Google's dominance in search has led to eight straight quarters of declining profit and a stock that's lost half its value in the past two years.
``It shows how serious the threat is from Google,'' Jordan Rohan, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets in New York, said in an interview. ``Yahoo is vulnerable. Investors are losing patience with the Yahoo management team.'' The New York-based analyst rates the stock ``outperform.''
Google yesterday reported a 52 percent increase in fourth- quarter sales growth, its 14th straight quarter exceeding 50 percent. Still, profit and revenue trailed analysts' estimates as it received less money than expected from ad deals with social- networking sites like News Corp.'s MySpace.
Google, based in Mountain View, California, captured 56 percent of U.S. Web queries in December, almost double the combined share for Yahoo and Microsoft, which attracted 18 percent and 13 percent, according to New York-based Nielsen Online. Searches will account for 37 percent of the $27.5 billion U.S. online advertising market in 2008, estimates research firm EMarketer Inc.
Yahoo's Investments
Yahoo has also lost sales in the market for graphical, or display, ads to social-networking sites like Facebook Inc. and MySpace. Co-founder Jerry Yang replaced Terry Semel as chief executive officer in June to reignite sales growth. Microsoft increased competition with Google by agreeing to buy a 1.6 percent stake in Facebook, the second-most visited social- networking site.
About half of Yahoo's market value comes from its investments in China's Alibaba Group and Alibaba.com, Yahoo Japan and South Korea's Gmarket Inc. The company said this week that the value of those investments was more than $10 a share in the latest quarter.
Yahoo Rejection
Microsoft and Yahoo explored ways to work together in late 2006 and early 2007, according to a letter Ballmer sent to the Yahoo board. Yahoo rejected the idea of being taken over by Microsoft a year ago, the letter said.
``This combination provides value to advertisers in the form of more scale and more inventory,'' Kevin Johnson, who runs Microsoft's Windows and Internet group, said in an interview. ``It provides value to publishers, in terms of integrating the ad platform.''
Yahoo was founded by Yang and David Filo while the two were graduate students at Stanford University in 1995. The co- founders, who own a combined 9.8 percent of Yahoo's stock, took the company public a year later. After a three-year jump in the stock price, they were each worth $4 billion, according to Forbes Magazine. Then the market crashed in 2000, wiping out 86 percent of Yahoo's market value.
The purchase would be the largest acquisition ever in the technology industry, surpassing Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.'s $26 billion acquisition of First Data Corp. last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Acquisition History
There have been bigger media and telecommunications deals. America Online Inc. in 2001 bought Time Warner Inc. for $124 billion to create the largest Internet and media company. In 2000, Vodafone Plc of the U.K. paid $175 billion for Mannesmann AG, Germany's biggest mobile-phone company.
Today's offer would dwarf Microsoft's previous largest acquisition, last year's $6 billion takeover of AQuantive Inc. Ballmer pursued the purchase after Google agreed to buy DoubleClick Inc., an AQuantive rival, for $3.1 billion.
Microsoft opposed the DoubleClick acquisition, claiming it will give Google too much control over the online ad market. The deal is under review by European regulators.
Microsoft's bid to challenge Google in online ads results from slowing growth in the computer software market. Microsoft also faces challenges in that business from Google, which now offers applications for word processing, spreadsheets and presentations over the Web.

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