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Yahoo investor proposal unlikely to push Microsoft

By Nancy Gohring , IDG News Service , 10/10/2008
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A relatively small Yahoo shareholder is proposing a new Microsoft takeover offer, but analysts don't think it's enough to entice the companies back to the negotiating table.

On Thursday, Mithras Capital, a California investor and Yahoo shareholder, issued a statement proposing that Microsoft buy Yahoo at US$22 per share, $11 less per share than Microsoft's last offer for the entire company, but still a premium over the current price.

As part of the deal, Microsoft would divest Yahoo's Asian assets and non-search businesses. By Mithras' calculations, assuming Microsoft is able to sell off the non-search businesses at Mithras' estimates, the deal would cost Microsoft about $10.3 billion.

While analysts say that Microsoft surely wouldn't ignore a good opportunity to buy Yahoo, there's nothing about this proposal that is likely to push Microsoft over the edge. "I'd have to describe it as a long shot," said Andrew Frank, an analyst at Gartner.

In the approximately three months since talks between the companies fell apart, the economic meltdown in the U.S. has driven down the value of Yahoo's stock from around $22 to around $12. Microsoft also hasn't been immune to the crisis, with its stock price falling from around $26 in July to closer to $22 now.

While the drop in stock value makes Yahoo a less-expensive takeover target, the odds of Microsoft making another offer are about even, said Sid Parakh, vice president of equity research at McAdams Wright Ragen. "It's a 50/50 possibility that they'll come back," he said.

Microsoft now may be considering whether it is better off buying back its own stock or buying Yahoo, Parakh said, because Mithras' proposal values Yahoo's stock at about the same as Microsoft's is trading at. While buying Yahoo comes with the benefit of some search market share, it also comes with the challenges of integrating a large company. "It's a trade-off," he said.

Microsoft and Yahoo both declined to comment on the proposal.

The changed economic conditions don't necessarily make Yahoo a sweeter deal, said Frank. "It may be cheaper, but the other side of the coin is that nobody wants to use cash for anything," he noted.

From a tactical standpoint, Yahoo is still about as attractive a buy as it was when the deal last fell through, Frank said. "If anything, Microsoft's search share has gone down, meaning they need a search solution more than ever," he said. "Assuming that their strategy is still to offer a kind of complete competitive suite of media options for online marketers, there's clearly still a hole there."

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