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Microsoft + Yahoo: It's all about the GOOG

Posted Feb 01 2008, 10:40 AM by Kim Peterson
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So Microsoft knocked on Yahoo's door this morning, proposing marriage and holding a $44.6 billion bouquet to seal the deal. The unsolicited offer amounts to $31 a share -- a 62% premium above Yahoo's stock price yesterday.

In a letter to Yahoo's board, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer says that the online business of the two companies could combine "to create a more effective competitor in the online marketplace."

In other words, it's all about Google. That pesky search engine company has become an industry giant, gaining marketshare and revenue and rolling out new online services all the time. If we can't beat Google separately, Ballmer says, let's join together and crush it!

No word yet on Yahoo's reaction. I'll bet the board is squirming now, though, because it really doesn't have much choice. Does Yahoo keep going as its own entity, flailing in a business it helped pioneer, struggling with staff layoffs, a disappearing market cap and declining revenue and profit growth?

I think $44.6 billion is a steal for Microsoft. And yes, there are lots of redundancies between the two companies, particularly in core online services like mail, messenger, search and social media. But MicroHoo would immediately get to work on knocking out a killer advertising platform, one that could cut Google down to size. That's where the money's at these days, and that's what this deal is all about.

Like any unsolicited offer, Microsoft's actions have the potential to start a bidding war for Yahoo. I can only see two companies that might go for it: Google, in a purely defensive move, and News Corp. A bidding war seems unlikely, though. Microsoft is playing this one well.

Yahoo shares have soared more than 45% on the news today and are trading at $28.13 as of this writing. If you had listened to my buy recommendations last month (here and here) you'd be sitting pretty right now. Google shares are down some 9%.

Here's what others are saying about today's news:

Wired: "Analysts have suspected such a deal could happen all along, but we were skeptical because a) we thought Jerry Yang wanted to turn the company around on his own, and b) because of what will likely be a devastating culture clash between the evil empire and the purple and gold empire."

Jeff Jarvis: "This is just as well for Yahoo, which had no strategy, really. They’d gone as far as they could with the old-media model, as exploited by the last CEO, former movie-studio head Terry Semel. Yahoo cofounder Jerry Yang started saying the right things about turning Yahoo into a platform, but it probably would have taken years to turn his culture around. They were too used to operating like a movie studio or publishing house." 

Silicon Alley Insider: "This is a brilliant move by Microsoft--a big premium dangled in front of battered Yahoo shareholders, but a price that would have seemed absurdly low as recently as six months ago." 

Mini-Microsoft: "If the buy goes through, it will be one huge turning point for Microsoft: I think we'll either turn it around brilliantly and our mega-investment will be worth it, or we'll be turn asunder and revert back to our core cash cows." 

Paul Kedrosky: "Google is dominating a tipping market -- search and online advertising -- and consolidation among competitors is about the only rational response. A combined Yahoo/Microsoft would become a truly material piece of the ad market, in excess of 40%, which is enough for it to finally offer Google a credible threat." 

Andy Beal: "Will buying a company that has failed to stand up to Google in any way, help Microsoft–which has equally poor performance. Do two losers, make a winner?" 

Danny Sullivan: "But the short story is this. Search is important, and Microsoft has failed to build much less maintain search share while Yahoo has held steady against Google." 

Seeking Alpha: "Microsoft must be sensing that it has one big shot to catch Google in the search wars and Yahoo is the best way to make it happen. On the surface, Microsoft’s bid is out of character, but given acquisitions like aQuantive it’s clear that CEO Steve Ballmer is thinking a little like Oracle CEO Larry Ellison." 

Disclosures: I don't own shares of any companies mentioned in this post. And while Microsoft owns this blog, Microsoft does not control, censor or otherwise have any editorial influence over what I write.

Comments

 

How many people actually associate Yahoo with search?  Has anyone ever?  Seriously, I went from Alta Vista in '94 to Google in '99, nothing in between.  To be honest, I'm not even sure what Yahoo's business plan is.  I know they have a toolbar that's constantly trying to install itself on my computer, but other than than, what do they do?  A news aggregate, I guess.  But literally dozens of sites do it better, Digg or Slashdot for example.  Pretty much the only thing that's kept Yahoo alive the last few years is free email, and their alliance with AT&T (SBCGlobal).  This has no place to go but down.

Wrong time, for too much money, for too little return.

Another flawed operation by Ballmer & the board that will provide no benefit to Microsoft shareholders. Just like many of the companies aquistions in the 1990's, they will have to write this one off as a failed investment in a couple of years too.

Note how the stock fell almost 7% today - down almost 20% since the fall of last year.

The market has spoken. Ballmer should listen.

It is an obvious win win. The industry wins and the users win. Do No Evil, Google is a fine company, however it would not do for them to own the market place. What is ping without the pong?

Two equally capable giants would be good for the giants and we folks out here in cyberspace. Go Go Go.

Don Jones

Here we come........watch out GOOGLE.

THE NETFLIX SHOULD STOP SENDING DVDS BY MAIL INSTEAD IT SHOULD START VIDEO DOWNLOAD

Google must have just yawned today.  No great shakes.  Nobody remembers second place; least of all third.  Isn't the average of 2 + 3 = 2 1/2?

this is great for the day traders,we dont advertise, we just want action. good or  bad a happening will take place.  and you will hear from a mass of small co., that will cause mutual fund portfolials to be more customer oriented.

hi guys

this deal is just perfect for us as users   why???????????

because the third world war  between goog and  microsoft will accelerate the development of s/w

and  this is what we want

would doubt if this would actually going to happen.

I think it's a bad move for Microsoft. Their stock dropped just from the mention of the buyout. I don't use either of their search engines now and I won't after the merger if it happens. Google wins hands down regardless of the outcome.

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