February 1, 2008

WOW. Microsoft Offers $44.6 Billion To Acquire Yahoo

Duncan Riley

254 comments »

Update: More on the deal here and here (email from Ballmer to all MS employees)

microsoft.jpgIt’s been rumored for a long time, but now it’s reality.

Microsoft has made an unsolicited $44.6 billion bid for Yahoo. The bid, which would consist of cash and Microsoft stock, values Yahoo shares at $31 a share, a 62% premium on Thursdays closing price.

Michael stated during his appearance on Fox Business this week that Yahoo could face a takeover by Microsoft as part of an ad play, and he was right. Microsoft cites online advertising as being one of the key benefits of the acquisition, saying that “resulting benefits of scale along with the associated capital costs for advertising platform providers make this a time of industry consolidation and convergence. Today this market is increasingly dominated by one player. Together, Microsoft and Yahoo! can offer a competitive choice while better fulfilling the needs of customers and partners.”

The emphasis is mine but it’s another key point: Microsoft + Yahoo = a stronger competitor to the Google borg.

Microsoft has previously shown an interest in Yahoo, with reports in May 2007 saying that Microsoft had approached Yahoo about a friendly takeover.

As follows, the letter from Microsoft to the Yahoo board, there’s also a conference call at 8:30am EST where we hope to get more details.

January 31, 2008

Board of Directors
Yahoo! Inc.
701 First Avenue
Sunnyvale, CA 94089
Attention: Roy Bostock, Chairman
Attention: Jerry Yang, Chief Executive Officer

Dear Members of the Board:

I am writing on behalf of the Board of Directors of Microsoft to make a proposal for a business combination of Microsoft and Yahoo!. Under our proposal, Microsoft would acquire all of the outstanding shares of Yahoo! common stock for per share consideration of $31 based on Microsoft’s closing share price on January 31, 2008, payable in the form of $31 in cash or 0.9509 of a share of Microsoft common stock. Microsoft would provide each Yahoo! shareholder with the ability to choose whether to receive the consideration in cash or Microsoft common stock, subject to pro-ration so that in the aggregate one-half of the Yahoo! common shares will be exchanged for shares of Microsoft common stock and one-half of the Yahoo! common shares will be converted into the right to receive cash. Our proposal is not subject to any financing condition.

Our proposal represents a 62% premium above the closing price of Yahoo! common stock of $19.18 on January 31, 2008. The implied premium for the operating assets of the company clearly is considerably greater when adjusted for the minority, non-controlled assets and cash. By whatever financial measure you use - EBITDA, free cash flow, operating cash flow, net income, or analyst target prices - this proposal represents a compelling value realization event for your shareholders.

We believe that Microsoft common stock represents a very attractive investment opportunity for Yahoo!’s shareholders. Microsoft has generated revenue growth of 15%, earnings growth of 26%, and a return on equity of 35% on average for the last three years. Microsoft’s share price has generated shareholder returns of 8% during the last one year period and 28% during the last three year period, significantly outperforming the S&P 500. It is our view that Microsoft has significant potential upside given the continued solid growth in our core businesses, the recent launch of Windows Vista, and other strategic initiatives.

Microsoft’s consistent belief has been that the combination of Microsoft and Yahoo! clearly represents the best way to deliver maximum value to our respective shareholders, as well as create a more efficient and competitive company that would provide greater value and service to our customers. In late 2006 and early 2007, we jointly explored a broad range of ways in which our two companies might work together. These discussions were based on a vision that the online businesses of Microsoft and Yahoo! should be aligned in some way to create a more effective competitor in the online marketplace. We discussed a number of alternatives ranging from commercial partnerships to a merger proposal, which you rejected. While a commercial partnership may have made sense at one time, Microsoft believes that the only alternative now is the combination of Microsoft and Yahoo! that we are proposing.

In February 2007, I received a letter from your Chairman indicating the view of the Yahoo! Board that “now is not the right time from the perspective of our shareholders to enter into discussions regarding an acquisition transaction.” According to that letter, the principal reason for this view was the Yahoo! Board’s confidence in the “potential upside” if management successfully executed on a reformulated strategy based on certain operational initiatives, such as Project Panama, and a significant organizational realignment. A year has gone by, and the competitive situation has not improved.

While online advertising growth continues, there are significant benefits of scale in advertising platform economics, in capital costs for search index build-out, and in research and development, making this a time of industry consolidation and convergence. Today, the market is increasingly dominated by one player who is consolidating its dominance through acquisition. Together, Microsoft and Yahoo! can offer a credible alternative for consumers, advertisers, and publishers. Synergies of this combination fall into four areas:

Scale economics: This combination enables synergies related to scale economics of the advertising platform where today there is only one competitor at scale. This includes synergies across both search and non-search related advertising that will strengthen the value proposition to both advertisers and publishers. Additionally, the combination allows us to consolidate capital spending.

Expanded R&D capacity: The combined talent of our engineering resources can be focused on R&D priorities such as a single search index and single advertising platform. Together we can unleash new levels of innovation, delivering enhanced user experiences, breakthroughs in search, and new advertising platform capabilities. Many of these breakthroughs are a function of an engineering scale that today neither of our companies has on its own.

Operational efficiencies: Eliminating redundant infrastructure and duplicative operating costs will improve the financial performance of the combined entity.

Emerging user experiences: Our combined ability to focus engineering resources that drive innovation in emerging scenarios such as video, mobile services, online commerce, social media, and social platforms is greatly enhanced.

We would value the opportunity to further discuss with you how to optimize the integration of our respective businesses to create a leading global technology company with exceptional display and search advertising capabilities. You should also be aware that we intend to offer significant retention packages to your engineers, key leaders and employees across all disciplines.

We have dedicated considerable time and resources to an analysis of a potential transaction and are confident that the combination will receive all necessary regulatory approvals. We look forward to discussing this with you, and both our internal legal team and outside counsel are available to meet with your counsel at their earliest convenience.

Our proposal is subject to the negotiation of a definitive merger agreement and our having the opportunity to conduct certain limited and confirmatory due diligence. In addition, because a portion of the aggregate merger consideration would consist of Microsoft common stock, we would provide Yahoo! the opportunity to conduct appropriate limited due diligence with respect to Microsoft. We are prepared to deliver a draft merger agreement to you and begin discussions immediately.

In light of the significance of this proposal to your shareholders and ours, as well as the potential for selective disclosures, our intention is to publicly release the text of this letter tomorrow morning.

Due to the importance of these discussions and the value represented by our proposal, we expect the Yahoo! Board to engage in a full review of our proposal. My leadership team and I would be happy to make ourselves available to meet with you and your Board at your earliest convenience. Depending on the nature of your response, Microsoft reserves the right to pursue all necessary steps to ensure that Yahoo!’s shareholders are provided with the opportunity to realize the value inherent in our proposal.

We believe this proposal represents a unique opportunity to create significant value for Yahoo!’s shareholders and employees, and the combined company will be better positioned to provide an enhanced value proposition to users and advertisers. We hope that you and your Board share our enthusiasm, and we look forward to a prompt and favorable reply.

Sincerely yours,

/s/ Steven A. Ballmer

Steven A. Ballmer

Chief Executive Officer

Microsoft Corporation

Update: TechCrunch UK has a European take on deal here].

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Comments

RSS feed for comments on this post.

  1. Marc

    Been refreshing for 20 mins waiting for this post. You got it before most others though.

  2. lawrence

    WOW is definitley the word to use for this blockbuster acquisition offer.

    now looks like a good time to sell for Yahoo - but they shouldn’t sell, not now or never.

  3. PN

    Wow! New I should have bought Yahoo shares a little while back. 62% premium is a great fricking return. I’ve always thought yahoo is undervalued when you look at its total site visitor numbers, even though it doesnt dominate search like Google.

  4. Joe Charakupa

    Just read it on the BBC, thought you’d have more details.

    Good fit.

    Will wait to hear moe

  5. Daniel Bower

    BBC had it 9 minutes ago.

  6. jyd

    Was in NYT a while ago

  7. Marc

    Bloomberg had it almost 30 mins ago.

  8. Jon

    This is great news (for Yahoo), now they don’t need to figure out who they are or what they are suppose to do in the future… this headache has now been bought by Microsoft (???). Way too much money, imagine if they put 45 Billion into their MSN instead… that would have been a far better investment in my opinion.

    Jon
    http://woodmarvels.com - Create Unique Memories

  9. PN

    Channel Ten late news in Australia alerted me about 10 mins ago. Id just been reading Techcrunch and was disappointed I didn;t knnow. Came back to Techcrunch and the story was here, but disappointed to find out from a mainstream slow news channel like Ten.

  10. Damien Mulley

    Loving the reaction from Twitterland already

  11. Trey Michel

    When they merge Facebook into the mix in 2009 with an all stock purchase, the picture will be complete.

  12. YDRIVE

    Good premium for the yahoo shareholders ;-D

  13. JP

    WOW indeed…..

  14. Prabhu

    Now it will be interesting to watch and learn who owns maximum data about users - Google or MS-Yahoo duo.

  15. Olubi Ezra

    nice one. . . was really waiting for this.

  16. Michael Fomkin

    This will change the internet landscape forever.

  17. Dan Birdwhistell

    Something I’m not getting. MSFT only has $19bn cash on hand, and this is a half cash, half stock deal and they mention no pending financing for this. So I assume that they DO have additional financing to make this deal happen?

  18. Asad

    Regardless of what happens now, I just want to say how pretty damn historic this is.

  19. Floyd Price

    OMG

  20. Jed Christiansen

    Very interesting.

    Any idea why the news was released at 4am Pacific time? There generally isn’t any good West Coast news on the BBC at noon in London, so this was a bit of a surprise!

    This is certainly going to be a game-changing acquisition, if it gets done.

  21. Steven Finch

    This is all so interesting. But will they actually want to take it.

  22. Search◆ Engines Web

    How was this leaked and Why

    Think about it?!

  23. JohnofScribbleSheet

    No surprise here, I wonder if Yahoo will accept?

  24. Steven Finch

    I have also written an article about this on my site. http://www.crenk.com

  25. Arona

    Microhoo!

  26. Dennis Howlett

    @Search Engines Web: It wasn’t leaked. It’s a regulatory requirement to disclose.

  27. Chirag N R

    night mare for google

  28. Adam

    @Arona

    That made me spit a little bit of beverage on my screen. haha.

  29. Chris

    Well, we have seen MS do big purchase before. What will be interesting is how they can leverage the technology and traffic. I have not been too impressed with MS move in the web space so far, and the last two years of Yahoo had not impressed me either…. Still, MS Office Live + Yahoo could really work if done right… if done right.

  30. Joe Charakupa

    @Jon

    This is a very good deal for MSFT as well. It’s almost FREE money

    Yahoo trades at 9.4 times adjusted 2008 earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, a big discount to Google, which trades at 17.5 times EBITDA.

    By further comparison, the group of Disney, Viacom, Time Warner and News Corp. sell for 7.1 times EBITDA but have smaller growth expectations than Yahoo.

  31. NasMobile

    Google is great, but real competition is required in terms of Search. A successfully executed acquisition would achive this. It would also make Google fight Microsoft harder on their own patch - operating system and office software. Let the competition begin again and let us all benefit from cheaper (or free) and better products and services.

  32. Faisal

    I’m truly disappointed by you TC.

    I opened CNN to check on the election thing and found the acquisition news up in red as a Breaking news.

    Came here to see details and found nothing about it.

    checked Techmeme and found nothing , Gigaom , etc and all came empty.

    Traditional media bated you guy’s on this and it proved blogs are still just blogs!

  33. Joe Charakupa

    @JohnofScribbleSheet

    Cos they will. Analysts target price for the year range from $23-$28.

    A lot of sharholders will revolt if the board don’t agree.

  34. Jack

    But will the EU allow this to happen?

  35. Rajiv Singh

    Ballmer is a dancing monkey.

  36. Andrew

    Googles move - merge with Apple?

  37. Dyde

    Too bad for Microsoft. They finally jumped the shark.

  38. Jason Jenkins

    GREAT MOVE MICROSOFT! THEY HAVE THE CASH, EXPERIENCE AND NOW THE EYEBALLS TO COMPETE IN THIS SPACE WITH GOOGLE. THE NEXT TECH MOVE MOVE WILL BE FOR CONTENT TO FILL THESE PIPELINES. COMPANIES SUCH AS ABSTRACT10.COM ARE IN A GREAT POSITION FOR FUTURE M AND A ACTIVITY. ALL THESE EYEBALLS WILL DEMAND LARGE VOLUMES OF USER GENERATED CONTENT. IS A GOOGLE /AOL ACQUISITION IN THE WORKS?!!!!

  39. http://www.googleyahoobaidu.com

    http://www.googleyahoobaidu.com

    This will change the internet landscape forever.

    I say too

  40. Duncan Riley

    Faisal
    if you’re reading TC through the feed it’s borked at the moment and stuff is delayed, but check the times on the earlier comments here. We may not have been first but we were minutes of it breaking, at that in the middle of the night US time (and it’s late here in Aus where I am at the moment) is still a decent effort. Seriously though mate: your comment is 40 minutes in, or did I make up the comments before you?

  41. kevin

    good- Im so god damn sick of google.

    Im all about MSFT coming in and destroying the cocky google bastard.

  42. Daniel Bower

    Is a Google / AOL acquisition in the works - no.

  43. Martijn

    Wow - everyone felt something like this was coming but it still surprises…

    Interesting what will happen to other Internet Players like IAC, eBay and Amazon - more consolidation coming?? Or will they be unaffected by this?

  44. Iqbal

    Let the games begin!! Competition is good for everyone…including in the long run, Google itself.

  45. Yann V

    Damn that would hurt me.. If MS takes over with their closed and expansive software solutions politic, I’d need to pull out using any Yahoo components soon. Yahoo is very unique for me, I don’t use it as a search engine. C’mon guys, that’s not what Google and Yahoo are all about now, it provides expertise over many domains (Finance, GeoMapping, Streaming, Advertising, Front End engineering…)

    Google and Yahoo are sharing most of their breakthrough while MS expect to reserve it for those who can afford it. They always did so and showed us how bad it goes with a Vista that even Dell refused to sell with a new computer (preferring Ubuntu!) Not mentionning a Windows Live that uses billions on advertising, admitting the same way natural organic growth will not happen at all for it. Examples are countless.

    MS greedy politic has no match for the visionary and forward thinking state of mind of Yahoo. The ‘If you can’t beat them, buy them’ politics applies for the weak which Yahoo is not. MS is insulting YaHoo trying to use its pimp policy on them.

  46. quirkyalone

    Faisal > What did you gain by reading this news a few minutes earlier?

  47. Andy Triboletti

    i hope they sell, maybe they’ll be able to stop making yahoosense suck so bad.

  48. Drew Olanoff

    This is a make or break deal for Microsoft. And honestly, not so much for Yahoo. While I think Yahoo shareholders will accept the deal, secretly the brass is hoping that they hold down the fort as Balmers letter really makes Yahoo look more attractive than they really are.

    For all of the hits Microsoft has taken for not buying companies like Flickr and such, this is the one they’ve been waiting for.

    Google needs competition and fast. In search and in advertising.

  49. Bernard Moon

    Wow is right. Seriously. As many have said, the speculation was there but until someone pulls the trigger…

    Do you hear the Death Star music in the background? What’s that heavy breathing? The Darkside is still strong… :)

  50. Faisal

    Duncan ,

    Well i maybe asking for too much but honestly i was expecting more :)

    After Google-Yotube story TC became my hub for silicon Vally news , so i expected to have more info and insights to this story.

    especially we all (including readers) were expecting this to happen any time.

    any way , thanks for replying , i will definitely subscribe to the feed now.

  51. Spez Smartman

    This is terrible news for web surfers but great news for Yahoo! shareholders. I wouldn’t want my Yahoo! apps (including Flickr) to be assimilated by the Borg MSN cube. Imagine: Yahoo! Mail becoming Hotmail. New versions of Flickr and Delicious becoming some sort of cockamany platform to advertise the benefits of Silverlight (or whatever MSN calls their AJAX silliness). And it means we would all have to stare at the shine of Steve Balmers head a little more often.

    Argh.

    Please Yahoo! Stay independent!

    - Spez
    http://www.gabbr.com

  52. Vinod Ponmanadiyil

    Myahoo!.. Something fishy.. :)

  53. Rick

    I have the same fears as Yann V. If MS builds its signature Redmond wall around Yahoo, an import source technological innovation and knowledge for the rest of the web will dry up.

    Competition for Google might be good news for the web, the kind of competition Microsoft has to offer could in the end actually hurt just about everybody besides advertisers.

  54. Ihsan Kriato

    If Microsoft doesn’t buy Yahoo, %62 premium ratio will be a very bad advertisement who buys the shares today.

  55. YDRIVE

    I don’t think Microsoft wants to kill the Yahoo brand.. Y!? :-D

  56. Marc

    I think it all depends on how well Microsoft can integrate them, capitalize on synergies and scale and on top of that they have to really kick up innovation with a lighter, smaller, faster model for new products.

  57. Faramarz