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Yahoo! Rejects Microsoft/Icahn Search and Restructuring Proposal

12 July 2008 0 views No Comment

! Suggests Make A To Whole

SUNNYVALE, Calif., Jul 12, 2008 (BUSINESS WIRE) — ! Inc. (Nasdaq:YHOO), a leading global Internet , confirmed today that it has rejected a joint from Corporation and for a complex restructuring of ! that would include the of !’s search business by .

The was made on Friday evening and ! was given less than 24 hours to accept the , the fundamental terms of which and Mr. Icahn made clear they were unwilling to negotiate. After reviewing the with its legal and financial advisers, !’s Board of Directors determined that accepting the is not in the best interests of its stockholders.

The Board’s rejection of the was based on a number of factors, including the following:

1. !’s existing business plus its recently signed commercial agreement with has superior financial value and less complexity and risk than the /Icahn .

2. The /Icahn would preclude a potential sale of all of ! for a full and fair price, including a control premium.

3. The major component of the overall value per share asserted by /Icahn would be in !’s remaining non-search businesses which would be overseen by Mr. Icahn’s slate of directors, which has virtually no working knowledge of !’s businesses.

4. The /Icahn would require the immediate replacement of the current Board and removal of the top management team at !. The ! Board believes these moves would destabilize ! for the up to the one year it would take to gain regulatory approval for this deal.

, Chairman of ! said, “This odd and opportunistic alliance of and has anything but the interests of !’s stockholders in mind. Clearly, , having failed to advance in search, is aligning with the short-term objectives of Mr. Icahn to coerce ! into selling its core strategic search assets on terms that are highly advantageous to , but disadvantageous to ! stockholders. ’s Board of Directors will not allow that to happen. !’s Board remains open to any transaction that delivers full value to our stockholders - we just do not believe such a transaction should be dictated by and a single short-term investor.”

continued, “After negotiating among themselves without the involvement of !, and presented us with a ‘take it or leave it’ under which we would be required to restructure the , hand over to !’s valuable search business and to the rest of the , giving us less than 24 hours to respond. It is ludicrous to think that our Board could accept such a . While this type of erratic and unpredictable behavior is consistent with what we have come to expect from , we will not be bludgeoned into a transaction that is not in the best interests of our stockholders.”

also noted that ’s position that it would not deal with, or otherwise engage with, !’s management to reach agreement on this or to implement it, is completely absurd and irresponsible given the complexity of the deal - one that requires the removal of half of !’s business from ! and then the integration of it into .

!’s Board points out that a transaction to the whole would be much more straightforward and involve far less risk than the new or any similar alternative. The Board believes a whole transaction could be negotiated and executed prior to August 1st. In rejecting the /Icahn , ! not only repeated its offer to sell the entire to for at least $33 per share, but also offered to negotiate an improved search only transaction. rejected both offers.

Ironically, , who jointly with developed and presented this , had previously urged ! not to sell its search business to . Specifically, in an interview on CNBC’s Fast Money program, on June 4, 2008, Mr. Icahn said, “… it’s crazy for this now to do this alternative deal and give the store away, because obviously, an alternative deal is a poison pill because once you’ve done an alternative deal and given the search to , you don’t need to buy you anymore. So, that would be a poison pill….”

Significantly, the Board believes and Mr. Icahn are overstating the value their search and restructuring would deliver to ! stockholders and are substantially understating the risks. ! noted that a transaction that would separate the ’s search and display businesses is an undertaking of great complexity. While the Board acknowledges that the current contains a number of improvements over ’s earlier , the ! Board’s conclusion that the current is not in the best interests of stockholders is based on a number of factors, including:

– The revenue guarantees suggested, which are conditional and subject to reduction, are well below the search revenue that the is expected to generate on its own and in association with its announced commercial agreement with . That agreement alone is estimated to generate $250 to $450 million of incremental cash flow for the first twelve months following implementation, while allowing ! to remain a principal in paid search;

– The success of the remaining is critically dependent on ’s ability to effectively monetize search;

/Icahn’s proposed Traffic Costs rates are below market;

– The calls for ! to sell its industry-leading algorithmic search business and its related strategic and valuable intellectual property portfolio for no incremental consideration; and

– Many of the components of the headline value that Mr. Icahn and put forward, such as the spin-off of the !’s Asian assets and the return of cash to stockholders, are steps that could be taken by ! on its own and the Board continues to evaluate these options.

concluded, “ and Mr. Icahn are trying to dismantle the and deliver our search business to on terms that would be disadvantageous to ! stockholders. We are prepared to let our stockholders, not and , decide what is in their best interests and we look forward to the upcoming vote.”

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