Carl Icahn Takes on Yahoo's Board 279
narramissic and several others have written to point out that Carl Icahn has initiated a proxy battle with Yahoo's board of directors over their rejection of Microsoft's bid for the company in February. Icahn has purchased millions of Yahoo shares over the past week and assembled a group of nine other investors (including Mark Cuban) to persuade the board to resume talks with Microsoft. Yahoo remains unimpressed. Icahn's letter to Yahoo accuses:
"It is unconscionable that you have not allowed your shareholders to choose to accept an offer that represented a 72% premium over Yahoo's closing price of $19.18 on the day before the initial Microsoft offer. I and many of your shareholders strongly believe that a combination between Yahoo and Microsoft would form a dynamic company and more importantly would be a force strong enough to compete with Google on the Internet."
It's not completely their fault (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:It's not completely their fault (Score:5, Funny)
Why is it I know a merger won't be successful... (Score:4, Insightful)
Why is it that I know a merger between Yahoo and Microsoft won't be successful, but Steve Ballmer doesn't? Microsoft has proven, over many years, that it does not know how to run a search engine. Yahoo has proven, over many years, that...
When a mediocre, adversarial company merges into an another mediocre, adversarial company, what will be the result? Cute puppies?
It has been reported that Yahoo employees are against the merger. Maybe that is because many of them will lose their jobs.
Re:Why is it I know a merger won't be successful.. (Score:5, Insightful)
A Microsoft/Yahoo combination (assuming it's even on the cards any longer from Microsoft's view) would allow Microsoft to replace Yahoo's ineffective technology with Microsoft's superior technology, whilst keeping Yahoo's popular content and websites. Google already has both high traffic and the technology to generate a high amount of advertising revenue from it, which is why Microsoft and Yahoo really can't compete in advertising on their own: Microsoft needs a bigger audience and Yahoo needs better technology. This is the logic behind Yahoo's approach to Google too (i.e. combining Yahoo's audiences with Google's superior advertising technology), but it's nevertheless insane from a business point of view, because in almost every area Yahoo operates, Google is its chief competitor. It really looks like a principal-agent issue, with Yahoo management more interested in securing their own power than in doing what's best for the shareholders who employ them.
If the Yahoo employees behind the company's lagging technology are less than thrilled about a Microsoft takeover, I can certainly understand why: Microsoft have no need of Yahoo's inferior technology, only its audience, so a lot of Yahoo engineers are surplus to requirements. At best these engineers will end up working on technology designed by someone else (i.e. Microsoft's current technology), and at worst they'll lose their jobs. That doesn't mean the deal doesn't make a huge amount of sense for Yahoo shareholders, and the long-run viability of Yahoo as a whole, which it does. If Yahoo continues to be run by inept management, and continues to use technology that isn't competitive with its rivals, it's only a matter of time before it fails, and then these employees will lose their jobs anyway.
What is the "good technology" from Microsoft? (Score:5, Funny)
What is the "good technology" from Microsoft?
I just used Microsoft's Live.com to search for "aardvark". Interesting: Google returns a link to Firefox's Aaadvark add-on as the second entry. But Microsoft's live.com never lists the Firefox extension in the first 10 pages.
Can Microsoft be trusted not to be adversarial to customer interests in its search results? Apparently the answer is a big NO. Just that one random search convinced me to never use live.com.
Re:Why is it I know a merger won't be successful.. (Score:4, Funny)
Parent is currently moderated +5 insightful.
+5 Funny would be more appropriate. It is a wonderful joke.
The joke is confusing Microsoft's fantastic marketing prowess, built upon freedom of encumbrance of any form of ethics, with good technology. Besides, everybody at this point knows that Microsoft's developers developers developers have all cashed in their stock options and gone to more interesting work at Google, IBM, and yea even unto Yahoo. The whole point of that Microsoft - Yahoo deal is that Ballmer misses having some developers around.
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Google didn't win by somehow levering legions of users, they won by having better search technology that convinced people to move.
If MS has a better search engine than Google, then why doesn't anyone know about it? It's not like MS is so
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Re:It's not completely their fault (Score:4, Insightful)
This is Slashdot, for heaven's sake - the most popular place on the Interweb where one of the world's richest men can take the billions he has personally earned as the Former CEO of one of the most successfull software companies in the world and give it away to save lives and fight HIV/AIDS and a host of other diseases that kill millions of children each year...and be called "evil".
--ScottKin
Re:It's not completely their fault (Score:5, Insightful)
Take a good long look at what the that foundation donates. a decent percentage of it is is windows software which costs bill G nothing to make another million copies of. He then writes off the full retail (not OEM, but retail) value of the software. As if someone was buying boxed copies of the software.
the Oil tycoons, and steel tycoons of old at least built things that the public could visit, and use. Bill G is too cheap to even do that much.
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Take a good long look at what the that foundation donates. a decent percentage of it is is windows software which costs bill G nothing to make another million copies of. He then writes off the full retail (not OEM, but retail) value of the software. As if someone was buying boxed copies of the software.
I have a long and proud history of Microsoft-bashing, but you've been modded +5 Insightful (as of when I write this) by alleging some really nasty things without a source. This is a very serious suggestion - you're basically saying that Bill Gates's foundation engages in tax fraud. Also - Bill Gates doesn't own Windows, Microsoft does. Maybe he gets a discount, but it certainly wouldn't be free as you suggest. Do you have a source or documentation for this?
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Osama Bin Laden gives money to orphans that doesn't make him a saint.
Giving money away doesn't undo what you have done.
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Are you fucking serious? Osama Bin Laden KILLS PEOPLE.
How fucking out of touch do you have to be to compare Bill Gates to Osama Bin Laden?
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How fucking out of touch do you have to be with the english language/logic to jump to such a stupid conclusion.
Re:It's not completely their fault (Score:5, Insightful)
He's called "evil" because he got his money by
The guy's an ass who's held computing back for the last 25 years through actions that'd get you and me imprisoned, or at least run out of business.
By your logic, it doesn't matter how he got his wealth as long as he gives a little bit away. Well, nuts to that. Warren Buffett's doing pretty OK for himself and I'm unaware of any similar allegations against him.
It's OK that Bill's fake-donating money to charity, but he's still an ass.
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Re:It's not completely their fault (Score:4, Insightful)
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Possibly... unless they believe that a Microsoft takeover of Yahoo is inevitable, in which case they might simply be trying to make it as much of a pain for Microsoft as possible, just because they can. They might even be trying to drive Microsoft's bid even higher. After all, this offer is huge even by Microsoft's standards, and the higher Google (and others) can drive the bid before Yahoo accepts it, the more it'll hurt if it doesn't pan out for Microsoft.
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Similarly, if the barriers to entry in a m
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Sorry, that's just flat out wrong. There are numerous ways in which Google co
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Citation needed. I don't know that statement's true -- I don't recall any heavy activity on Google's part. Certainly nothing I'd describe as "frenetic".
I might've missed something, though.
Next up (Score:5, Funny)
In other news.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Addendum: (Score:5, Insightful)
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Who cares if the resulting Conglom-O tanks? It's all about the Benji's when you're talking that kind of scratch.
(Personal aside: It's sad when us poor saps see past the influx of cash and rationally evaluate the culture of both the companies and the market and realize that such a proposition would be a hands down mess, while the big bucks players wash their eyeballs of the whole situation).
Re:Addendum: (Score:5, Insightful)
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Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:In other news.... (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think Icahn actually believes what he is claiming. He's just claiming it so that he can make even more boatloads of cash.
The Yahoo deal would have made a lot of people like Icahn richer. They take the profits, run and do they really care what happens to Yahoo? No they don't.
If you think the deal doesn't make sense, then the people who should worry should be the people owning Microsoft shares.
The founders of Yahoo may not like their baby being destroyed in the long run, but that's what happens when you take a company public - it's no longer 100% in your hands.
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However, I do not agree that Icahn is an idiot. For him (and other investors) this is probably a lifetime opportunity to make money, for which they have invested in Yahoo. Their interest is in making money in the first place.
Brilliant idea. Why not we conspire against M$? Let them take over yahoo, and we all switch to some other portal, say xyz. Then M$ will s
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Every
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Re:In other news.... (Score:4, Interesting)
He recently tried to do the same thing to Motorola (disclaimer- I'm a current shareholder of MOT, and despise him) before the shareholder vote kept him out of the board- he still sued the company to force Motorola to sell its mobile business so he can cash out quickly.
Interestingly, he owns a hefty stake of Take Two. He may try the same shit if EA comes back with a bigger offer.
He has no other vision than seeing dollar signs as quick as possible (at any cost) and doesn't care any about the long-term health of the companies he plunders. Thousands have lost their jobs and even more small-time retail investors have been trampled on by him.
He's the worst kind of trader. In fact, I welcome short hedges more than seeing him scoop up shares of companies that I have positions in.
I doubt he cares (Score:2)
That's his only reason.
Anyone really thinking that yahoo plus Microsoft can really take on Google is fooling themselves. I don't think he's a fool.
Nor is he necessarily a nasty person. He is a capitalist, and very good at it.
Like it or not, this is exactly the sort of behavior that is viewed as being correct and successful in a capitalist society. Most of us little people only
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If I knew I made a better product that my competitor why the hell would I sell out to him?
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I think you're taking Ayn Rand a little too seriously.
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This has nothing to do with "smart". Microsoft's offer would have seen Yahoo shareholders make 72% of their investment overnight. If they believed in the merger, they could hold on for an intereseting ride. If not, they could cash out and smile at having nearly doubled their money. I don't believe Icahn has actually claimed t
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What's more disturbing is... my popup blocker occasionally catches surveys popping up on Slashdot. Yeah, seriously.
It's the DATA! (Score:2)
I think you are on the right track, but I'd posit MS does not want just the USERS; they are as muc, if not more, interested in the DATA.
Targete
He doesn't believe it. (Score:2)
He doesn't believe any of that.
At least, I won't believe he believes it until he promises to buy and hold a large amount of stock in Microsoft for a decade or so, should they buy Yahoo.
What I think he believes is that he can either (a) be an arbitrageur on Yahoo for fun and 60-70% profit or (b) get Yahoo to pay him to go away.
Money slaves.. (Score:2, Informative)
"I and many of your shareholders strongly believe that a combination between Yahoo and Microsoft would form a dynamic company and more importantly would be a force strong enough to compete with Google on the Internet"
Right..like they do care about that..they only want to cash out...money slaves.
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What about the Yahoo board asking 40 USD? What about Jerry Yang who rejects 33 USD and does not even take that to the board?
What ICahn is doing is telling Yang to go take a flying leap. I think Icahn is right here.
Yang let his emotion of hating Microsoft get in his way of business. If Yang had owned 51% of the shares then that is his right. BUT Yang owns about 43 million shares of 1.4 billion. This means he can say squat on what "his" company can or cannot do.
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Well, the original idea of owning shares in a company was that your share was bought at the cost of an investment into the company, and a portion of the company's profits would be paid to you as dividends to provide a return on your investment. This is, theoretically, the way it's still supposed to work.
What Icahn wants, however, is not to invest in a business and receive a return on that investment through dividends; instead, he wants to run a fly-by-night scheme where he
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It would be more accurate to say he sees it as a way of making an enormous quantity of money in a very short time. Whether or not that would happen to screw a bunch of people is really not of any consequence to him.
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haha (Score:5, Insightful)
I can only imagine what would happen by taking yahoo's infrastructure off free bsd and putting it on windows.
Google might just be loving this.
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Yahoo! (Score:5, Insightful)
I had given up hope that Microsoft would fire their legendary footgun at a Microwho? deal. I hope they blow all their available cash on this.
The synergy of this opportunity rivals a .com bubble for the ability to vanquish vast quantities of value.
Now I can look forward to reading about this in the news [google.com].
I don't get it. (Score:4, Interesting)
Simple (Score:2)
Re:I don't get it. (Score:5, Informative)
Simply put, in a few months the M$=B$ PR machine would rewrite history, add Yahoo market share and revenue to MSN's lack of market share and revenue and then claim all those gains for MSN as a result of Ballmer's skill, rather than simply buying those numbers in at a loss.
Competition in the search engine market (Score:3, Interesting)
the Nixon Defence .. (Score:2)
Because when MicroHOO does it that means that it is not illegal. And MS didn't make all those donations on capitol hill for nothing, DOH !!!
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This page [searchengineland.com] lists some dated stats which may or may not have changed significantly in the last ten months. Google had 54%, Yahoo had 22.9%, MSN/Live had 8.8% and Ask.com had 3.6%. That would effectively make two companies the ones serving up 85.7% of search results. Note that there's a reason Excite and Altavista are ignored.. they suck. I just ran a search on Excite for the term 'arduino' and every other link was a sponsored link. 39 results total including sponsored links. None of t
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Translation (Score:5, Insightful)
Though luck Icahn, betting on a single stock is stupid, go back to your books and study what "idiosyncratic risk" means.
Re:Translation (Score:4, Insightful)
Yahoo's board screwed up big time by trying to stay independent. Guess what? Google owns internet advertising and search. Neither Yahoo or Microsoft can really make much of a dent in it alone. Quite frankly, I'd much rather see a merger between them give Google some actual competition, because alone neither one is going anywhere. There is of course no guarantee that a combined company would actually be more competitive, but I find that more likely than Yahoo's fortunes suddenly doing a 180.
Re:Translation (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Translation (Score:4, Insightful)
</rant>
Traditionally (Score:3, Insightful)
Now it's a complex poker game and you aren't buying shares because the company will do well but so that you can sell those shares on quickly and make a profit.
Which isn't *necessarily* wrong except that, since this money is not gained from the output of the company, can only come from the poor investment choices of other people.
In other words, it concentrates the wealth into the h
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You're the stupid one; YHOO has 1.4 billion shares outstanding. Carl Icahn has a four percent stake [theregister.co.uk] in Yahoo -- that's 56 million shares, in case you didn't want to do the math (I did). Today, Yahoo! closed at 27.75/share. This means that Icahn's investment is worth 1.554 billion. Now, Carl Icahn [wikipedia.org] is purported to have $14 billion in assets. This implies that 11.1% of his wealth is currently invested in Yahoo, and that's assuming that the figure on Wikipedia hasn't changed since it was uploaded -- it may have
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What offer? (Score:4, Interesting)
From TFA: "I and many of your shareholders strongly believe that a combination between Yahoo and Microsoft would form a dynamic company"
Microsoft, on the other hand, says it is no longer interested http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2008/may08/05-03letter.mspx [microsoft.com]
Re:What offer? (Score:5, Insightful)
Either way, if yahoo can't fight this somehow, they're done. Nobody that has a clue is going to stick around hoping MS gets this one right. If people wanted to play with MS, hotmail and others would have been an automatic winner, and this wouldn't even be an issue.
As with a previous poster, I hope this puts a nice dent in their wallet, and burns them all. Not just because MS needs a rung kicked out, but as an example to other companies that buying out the competition in order to destroy what made it competition, is a stupid idea.
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When I see something like this.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Even if regulated accounting doesn't float your boat, the ideas of Fischer Black (eg. http://www.amazon.com/Fischer-Black-Revolutionary-Idea-Finance/dp/0471457329/ref=sr_11_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1210920867&sr=11-1 [amazon.com]
) can't be ignored. Under that light, the entire deal seems to be more involved in noise trading than any solid economic expansion.
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Yahoo was... (Score:5, Insightful)
...the big cheese until a couple of guys in a garage fucked it up for them. Yahoo failed to adapt.
Microsoft was the big cheese until they fucked it up themselves by releasing an unstable (moreso than they usually do) product. They'll probably fail to learn their lesson.
Merging a company full of fuckups with a company full of fuckups will still give you a company full of fuckups - just bigger. Even so, Google doesn't have its own OS, and that would significantly contribute to Yahoosofts's power. (I'd say Microhoo, but it sounds dirty.)
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Whether you add one drop of poison in a glass of milk or add one drop of milk in a glass of poison means the same.
Google + yahoo= instant death to both.
First of all how do you evaluate Yahoo and Microsoft (and Google) financially?
Balance sheets? P&L?
They were tools designed by Leonardo DaVinci's Accountant to help evaluate DaVinci's trade!
Secondly Balance Sheet was used by the Great Rails during the Great Expansion West to convince inv
Icahn's a Pain in The Ass (Score:5, Informative)
Even before Apple's iPhone came out and smacked Moto's RAZR out of the park, it was clear that Moto needed to be doing R&D for the next-gen handsets. Oh, and you might want to keep some cash around in case of a rainy day. Icahn got handed his hat. And Moto did a bunch of weird acquisitions.
These days, it's raining pretty hard at Moto. I'm sure that pile of cash is helping them through the lean times.
All of which is a roundabout way of saying: Carl Icahn is a vocal, over-exposed pain in the ass. Whenever he talks, put your hand over your wallet, and pay very careful attention to what he's doing with his own.
Schwab
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All of which is a roundabout way of saying: Carl Icahn is a vocal, over-exposed pain in the ass. Whenever he talks, put your hand over your wallet, and pay very careful attention to what he's doing with his own.
Schwab
OK, so if you resist a hostile takeover by Microsoft, they send an old billionaire to come fart in your office?
Why, oh why couldn't they have gone after Enron? That combination of gases could have fueled an entire city for a decade.
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Temporary ownership (Score:2)
I don't know...just doesn't seem completely right to me. I know he's acted well within his rights. But I also know he's looking for a short term gain in turning these shares around, as opposed to actually helping Yahoo the company survive. Which it does not if MS in
Silverlight (Score:2, Insightful)
Yahoo Chairman replies (Score:2, Informative)
in which Mr Bostock states that it is not in the shareholders interests to allow Icahn and his "handpicked nominees" to take over.
This is going to get very interesting!
Icahn is right! (Score:3, Interesting)
Whatever you think of microsoft as a company doesnt matter.
The yahoo board is supposed to represent its shareholders, if I hold stock in a company and someone offers 72% more than the shares are worth, and the company wont even let me consider the offer id be pissed too!
Icahn doesnt have a duty to yahoo, yahoo has a duty to its shareholder to act in their best interests
even if it means selling out to microsoft and losing their cushy jobs.
Sometimes not everything is black and white.
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Down with the man!
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This would have been a better deal for Yahoo than Microsoft. Yahoo shareholders would have gotten an "out" from that struggling company, but Microsoft would have been stuck with yet another Internet property that can't compete with Google's advertising business.
If I were a Yahoo shareholder, I would be pissed at the board rejecting Microsof
Don't do evil (Score:2)
you're projecting paranoia again Bill .. :) (Score:2)
No Bill, that's what you would have done if the situations were reversed
Illogical conclusion (Score:5, Interesting)
Microsoft + Yahoo = "Dynamic" ?
I think he's way off base. If Microsoft is going to be a Dynamic Duo with anyone, it would be more likely some organization that thinks like them and can compliment their business practices, such as:
Microsoft + Halliburton
Microsoft + SCO (oops, already happened)
Microsoft + Phillip Morris
Microsoft + the Mafia
Microsoft + Dow Chemical
Microsoft + Exxon Mobile
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Microsoft + Yahoo = .. (Score:3, Insightful)
Not exactly, remember they were in the search and email business before Google. MS strategy for success is invariably, buy up some vibrant company, like Hotmail, re brand it as Microsoft Whatever, use the Windows desktop monopoly to leverage it. Eg, every software update, installs Outlook, adds Microsoft affiliate web sites to Favorites and makes Microsoft.com your home page.
Design Microsoft services to make using third party services a jolting experience. Eg. Disable
Double Proxy (Score:2)
Ichan initiates a proxy battle, everyone grabs popcorn.
Microsoft doesn't need to be picking fights with all the litigation they've been through in recent years. They were smart to back down & wait things out.
I'm bailing out (Score:2)
To his credit, the dude's got balls! (Score:2, Interesting)