Microsoft back in bidding for Yahoo?
By Tom Brewster,
Microsoft is part of a consortium planning a bid for Yahoo, according to a report.
People familiar with the matter indicated private equity firm Silver Lake Partners and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board were working with Microsoft on the proposals, the Wall Street Journal reported.
If Yahoo had accepted our bid… then we would have closed post Lehman Brothers.
As part of the deal, Microsoft would contribute billions of dollars in a bid for Yahoo, the struggling internet company, according to the people. Indeed, it would put forward more than the other two partners, the sources said.
Confusing messages
Yet Microsoft has been putting out confusing messages about any potential bid for Yahoo.
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said this week he was lucky the Redmond giant failed to buy Yahoo back in 2008, when he offered a mammoth $44.6 billion to buyout the ailing search company.
Talking at the annual Web 2.0 Summit in San Francisco, Ballmer said he was relieved his company had not bought Yahoo, according to reports.
“Times change… sometimes you get lucky,” he said.
“Any chief executive who wanted to buy anything before the market collapsed in 2008 would be glad he didn’t buy it… If you think about the timing of it, if Yahoo had accepted our bid… then we would have closed post Lehman Brothers.”
Yet it is believed any acquisition of Yahoo now would still cost billions of dollars and Microsoft appears to remain interested.
Furthermore, prospective bidders are reportedly being put off by a clause requesting companies do not discuss Yahoo’s sensitive financial information with one another. This has worried those companies looking at joint bids, Reuters found, as the clause must be signed by those wanting to look at Yahoo’s figures.
The news came in the same week Yahoo beat low expectations in its quarterly results. Despite revenue being down five per cent, earnings per share were up 32 per cent year-on-year.
Nevertheless, the results were not positive for a firm that is going through some turbulence since firing its CEO this summer.
Meanwhile, AOL is believed to still be interested in a merger deal with Yahoo.
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Strategy Analysis & Insight
HP: it's all about the software, stupid
The hardware giant is to restructure again, at the cost of 27,000 jobs. But it is the vendor's software strategy that is now being questioned.
- CIO: Career is over?
- Windows Azure VM Beta for AWS users (and cloud virgins)
- Citrix takes on the mobile cloud at Synergy
- Bring you own device: the $600 question
- Getting ready for EMC World
- HP to bring indestructible plastic displays and Memristor storage to market
- Montreux Jazz Festival: Storage in a different light
- Interop 2012: Q&A, Saar Gillai, CTO, HP Networking
- There's more to IP than taming pirates
Latest Strategy Reviews
ThinPrint Printer Dashboard review: First Look
- Office 365 review: First look
- Novell ZENworks Configuration Management 11 Standard Edition review
- Mindjet MindManager 9 review
- Tableau Desktop Professional Edition review
- Spiceworks review
- Head to Head: Parallels Desktop 6 vs VMware Fusion 3
- Swiftlight review
- FaceTime Communications USG-1030 review
- Top 10 iPad apps for business review
advertisement
Most popular
- UK regulator shuts down Angry Birds scam
- Apple iPad 3 vs iPad 2 head-to-head review
- IBM bans use of Siri on iPhones
- Chromebooks: What's gone wrong?
- HP plans massive job cuts
- EMC World 2012: Tucci declares Documentum is here to stay
- Dell EqualLogic PS6100XS review
- Macs and Android under malware threat
- RIM loses its head of sales
- Local fibre broadband needs common standards
Latest News Videos in Strategy
Q&A: David Elton, PA Consulting Group
CIOs are increasingly influential, but have to juggle "dual roles", study finds.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.





