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Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Carl Icahn’s Yahoo Board Choices: Meyer and Biondi?

Unless there is an 11th-hour change of heart from Time Warner, former AOL head Jon Miller will still not be Carl Icahn’s choice for the two other seats he will select–which also requires Yahoo’s consent–to the board of the Internet company, set to be announced by Friday.

Instead, several sources with knowledge of the situation think Icahn is more likely to choose Edward Meyer and Frank Biondi (pictured here, left to right), both of whom were on the alternative board slate when the activist investor was waging his now-defunct proxy fight against Yahoo (YHOO).

Another possibility is someone BoomTown had previously picked–former Nextel exec John Chapple (pictured here)–as a personal favorite, noting in late July:

Thus, overall, from good-fit perspective, I like another former exec, John Chapple of Nextel best of all because mobile will be increasingly important to Yahoo in Web 3.0 (frankly, it better be, as Web 2.0 has not been too kind to Yahoo).

Via Sprint (S), Chapple knows from big mergers and he knows how to makes deals. He has been the operator of a digital company, unlike many of the others. And he is also an entrepreneur, which is a plus.

Longtime media exec Frank Biondi is a longtime Icahn crony, and Meyer definitely has the advertising chops Yahoo needs, as former Grey Global Group head.

Icahn has already been seated as a board member of Yahoo.

Presumably, Icahn will now begin to try to figure out ways to goose Yahoo’s lackluster stock from the inside, in order to recover the hundreds of millions of dollars in paper losses he has endured since he started his still fruitless quest to change Yahoo’s management and/or get it to sell to Microsoft (MSFT).

One possible scheme was to eventually install Miller as Yahoo CEO.

In any case, both Icahn and Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang strongly supported Miller for the board.

But Miller was unexpectedly nixed because of a noncompete agreement still in place that he had signed with Time Warner after he was tossed from AOL in late 2006.

After tacitly agreeing to waive the noncompete, Time Warner’s CEO Jeff Bewkes told Miller he could not be considered for the slot.

Thus, Yahoo is limited to the list of possible members of Icahn’s director slate.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Microsoft (Inevitably) Weighs In on the Yahoo Shareholder Vote Miscount

Yesterday–in a patented playbook move–some top Microsoft execs didn’t miss a chance to slap around Yahoo over its shareholder vote debacle, letting it be known to industry insiders (on the very loud QT, of course) that the Internet company knew full well that its biggest investor, Capital Research & Management, was going to vote a large number of shares against it.

Thus, it was just a hop, skip and a leak before their sentiments got hand-delivered to the doorstep of BoomTown HQ.

In essence, Microsofties are arguing that knowledge of a major investor’s dissatisfaction should have prompted Yahoo (YHOO) to question its unusually positive voting results at its annual meeting on Friday and ask the outside voting tabulator to recheck its numbers before officially releasing them.

As it turned out, the tally by Broadside Financial Solutions, an outside firm that conducts the tabulating for investors, was highly inaccurate related to the number of shares withheld by investors for particular board members.

As reported Friday, for example, Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang only had 14.6 percent of shareholder votes withheld, with 85.4 percent voting for him, which was better than the year before.

The new results saw Yang’s disapproval more than double what was previously reported, rising to 33.7 percent.

This huge delta was due to errors in counting the no votes from funds owned by Capital Research, which holds an overall stake of about 17 percent in Yahoo.

“They had to see the discrepancies,” said one source close to Microsoft’s (MSFT) thinking. “Yahoo was hoping no one would notice.”

While BoomTown is careful to consider the sources here–the collapse of Microsoft’s takeover bid for Yahoo has left quite a bit of acrimony between the pair–they actually might have a point.

Sources at Capital Research certainly agree, saying they unequivocally told Yahoo leadership that they were going to withhold a substantial number of votes from certain members of the company’s board.

Read more »

Friday, August 1, 2008

Liveblogging From Yahoo Annual Meeting: Bostock Defends Microsoft Dealmaking (Or Lack Thereof)

Talking to Yahoo shareholders as if they were particularly thick and surly teenagers, Yahoo Chairman Roy Bostock articulated his umpteenth defense of the board’s handling of its dealmaking with Microsoft.

“I’d like to take you back–with all the hoopla, all the publicity that has surrounded the company, I think there has been a great deal of misinformation,” said Bostock about Yahoo’s (YHOO) dealings with Microsoft (MSFT) over the last year, speaking at its annual meeting this morning.

Thanks, Roy–glad you finally cleared things up!

Actually, not so much, as his speech was more of the same of what Yahoo has been saying in defense of its rejection of Microsoft’s $31 takeover bid in February.

(Meanwhile, a Microsoftie texted me: “Stand up and scream: Liar.”)

A Microsoft spokesman said as much in an official statement, released while the meeting was still taking place: “Yahoo is attempting to rewrite history yet again with statements that are not supported by the facts.”

Maybe not, but also from Bostock on the Microsoft situation:

On Yahoo’s behavior: “Proactively engaged.”

On the board’s efforts: “Encouraged Microsoft to engage.”

On the Microsoft offer to buy Yahoo’s search: “Not compelling.”

Overall: “As we have said repeatedly, we were open to a deal with Microsoft for the whole company and search, if it made sense.”

And, best of all, about activist investor Carl Icahn, who recently dropped his proxy fight against Yahoo and is set to join the Yahoo board in mid-August: “Carl’s a smart guy, he’s a good guy, despite some of the things that have been written about him.”

Well, by Bostock mostly, in a series of nasty letters he traded with Icahn before peace was declared.

Now onto Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang and President Sue Decker!

BoomTown Liveblogging From Yahoo Annual Meeting in San Jose!

Ah, lovely breakfast pastries of all kinds tumbling down from the tables outside the Imperial Ballroom at the San Jose Fairmont this morning at Yahoo’s annual meeting.

But, of course, no Carl Icahn and the noisy proxy fight circus that would have followed the shareholder activist here.

Which is kind of a relief, really, after a very fraught year for the troubled Internet company.

As to news that is likely to come out of the meeting, which starts at 10 a.m.?

“It’s going to be boring,” said one Yahoo PR honcho.

“We’re going for dull,” said another, sporting a purple Yahoo T-shirt, which most of the various Yahoo (YHOO) minions were wearing.

“Nothing will happen,” said another.

Actually, it sounds like a great corporate strategy for the year ahead for Yahoo: Aggressive monotony!

No news is good news!

Bore reporters into a stupor!

Well, I am sure I can come up with something.

Until then, here is my video from last year’s meeting at the much less tony Santa Clara Convention Center:

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Yahoo Annual Meeting Countdown (2 Days to Go!): Slim Pickens!

Oh dear, oilman T. Boone Pickens has apparently been Yanged.

That sounds like something that would happen out on the back 40 of a Texas ranch that no one in the clan ever discusses in polite company.

Actually, losing about $50 million is also something moneymen like Pickens don’t like to talk about either, even if he is as rich as can be.

Of course, in dumping his 10 million shares so precipitously, Pickens’s parting shot showed exactly what Yahoo’s big weakness is as the company heads into its annual meeting this Friday: an increasingly depressed stock.

Indeed, because of Pickens’s departure as an investor, Yahoo (YHOO) shares dropped just below the dangerous $20 a share level yesterday to $19.71, not far off the $19.18 price that prompted Microsoft (MSFT) to attack in February.

Yahoo shares are now just holding onto the edge at $20.05 this morning.

This is perhaps Yahoo’s biggest external problem. While the stock has shown resilience of really dipping to the mid-teens, if the shares drop that far, Pickens will look attractive compared with the kind of vulture investors who will show up to pick at Yahoo.

Read more »

Monday, July 28, 2008

Yahoo Annual Meeting Countdown (4 Days to Go!): Who Will Be the New Board Members?

Well, it will not be nearly as interesting as it would have been had activist shareholder Carl Icahn been attacking in a full-throttle proxy fight.

But Yahoo’s annual meeting on Friday will be more of a humdinger than usual (and BoomTown is all signed up to go and waiting for confirmation, after agreeing to a long fascist list of no-you-can’ts from Yahoo PR).

So many moving parts, including who, who, who will Yahoo (YHOO) and Icahn decide on for the two other board members to join besides Icahn (pictured here)?

Actually, I mostly want to know who gets to sit next to Icahn at the first board meeting. I vote Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang!

But I digress, let’s hazard a guess, shall we, of who the newbies will be?

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Thursday, July 24, 2008

Who Will Be Microsoft’s Next Online Chief? McAndrews? Miller? BoomTown?

BoomTown was all busy trying to think of execs to replace Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang, as pressure mounts on him to right the troubled Internet company.

But now, Yang’s position feels safer than ever and it’s his nemesis–Microsoft– that needs a new leader for its long-stumbling online services business.

Microsoft (MSFT) was already cracking, according to sources, and had a wish list of internal and external candidates that CEO Steve Ballmer is now considering.

Read more »

Wednesday, July 23, 2008

When Will Microsoft Bust A(nother) Move?

Is Microsoft about to make another move on Yahoo? Or perhaps on AOL? Or is it just getting ready to articulate strategic plans for getting serious about the online search business on its own at its financial analysts’ tomorrow morning?

Or perhaps–and this might be the best strategy for the moment–the software giant is actually managing to stifle itself and wait to return to the playing field when things settle down a little bit.

One thing is clear: Microsoft (MSFT) has got to be plenty irked that its efforts have been vexed once again, this time by by the proxy fight settlement its one-time takeover quarry, Yahoo (YHOO), made earlier this week with activist investor Carl Icahn.

Read more »

Monday, July 21, 2008

Doing the Math: Who Won in the Yahoo-Icahn Truce?

A source close to Yahoo’s thinking emailed and declared that BoomTown was misinformed and ignorant of the insider mechanics of the high-level corporate wrangling when I suggested in a post earlier today that the settlement between Yahoo and Carl Icahn was perhaps not the time to break out the bubbly.

You know, because Yahoo’s (YHOO) stock is still moribund, morale is still low, Microsoft (MSFT) is still looming and the economy is still tanking.

Other than that, Yahoo sources wanted to let me know the Icahn truce was a win.

And that is absolutely true, technically speaking.

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Yahoo + Icahn = Shareholders Lose Again or Microsoft Ad Deal?

Okay, a show of hands of those who don’t want to hear another word about how incompetent the other side is in the now-settled proxy fight between activist investor Carl Icahn and Yahoo.

Icahn, whom Yahoo insisted last week was unfit to even turn on a computer, now appears to be perfectly capable of leading the troubled Internet company as a board member, along with two cronies of his choosing (with Yahoo’s consent).

What’s not clear–except for removing uncertainty and noise–is exactly what this means for shareholders or how it gets Yahoo (YHOO) back on track or even how a possible deal with Microsoft is now struck.

Read more »

Sunday, July 20, 2008

Who Has Stolen the Old Jerry Yang? (But No Need to Return Him!)

Could the new and improved Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang actually manage to beat back the proxy fight being waged against him by activist investor Carl Icahn?

It increasingly looks that way, with only 12 days to go until Yahoo’s annual meeting on Aug. 1.

But exactly which Yang will be running Yahoo (YHOO), if he does win, is probably the most important question shareholders need to ask.

Will it be the seemingly energetic Yang of the past two weeks, invigorated by the battle with Icahn and his new best friend and Yahoo foe, Microsoft (MSFT)?

Or will it be the other Yang?

Because for months and months now, since Microsoft waged its takeover bid on the Internet company he founded, the woe-is-me vibe emanating from Yang has been working the last nerve of anyone paying attention to the proceedings.

Given that this vibe was combined with a kind of cave dweller PR strategy of not speaking publicly–other than releasing an indignant, noncapitalized letter every now and then about the situation–some questioned Yang’s ability to gin up the kind of passion needed to bring Yahoo back from its current straits.

Even before the Microsoft parry in February, the ho-hum mood had trickled down to the troops, causing lower morale, too many departures and a general feeling–deserved or not–that Yahoo has been circling the drain for much too long under its current lackluster leadership.

And, let us not forget the drippy stock performance either.

And while BoomTown, especially, has to give both Yang and also Yahoo President Sue Decker much credit for appearing onstage at our sixth D: All Things Digital conference in May, most who saw the appearance (we posted the whole thing last week, starting here) were not blown away by the performance, considering it too enervated.

What then, do we make of the current round of pugnacious, dare-we-say, passionate, and, as it seems, pretty effective moves Yang has made this week to ward off the attacks of Icahn and Microsoft?

Read more »

Kara on Tech Ticker: Will Yahoo’s Yang Will Prevail in Proxy Fight?

Here is a post and also a video of me talking about the topic on Yahoo’s Tech Ticker last week with Henry Blodget and Aaron Task.

I also wrote about this issue–Yahoo (YHOO) CEO Jerry Yang’s chances in his proxy fight with activist investor Carl Icahn–in a post called, “Who Has Stolen the Old Jerry Yang? (But No Need to Return Him!)”

Friday, July 18, 2008

MicroHoo: The Likely Scenarios (Please Ignore the Poison-Pen Letters)

Listening to all the birds-on-a-wire chatter about what will happen in the latest round of the never-ending Microsoft-Yahoo saga, it’s still hard to know what to think, given the ever-increasing noise around the proceedings, which will continue until Yahoo’s Aug. 1 shareholder meeting.

Yesterday, it got louder still as Yahoo Chairman Roy Bostock and CEO Jerry Yang sent out far and wide yet another stinkbomb letter, calling activist investor Carl Icahn a money-grubbing “corporate agitator.”

Well, yes–not that there’s anything wrong with that!

Unless you are shocked, shocked, that gambling is going on here, as Yahoo (YHOO) apparently is (not really, but it makes for a good story).

But not content to stop there, Yahoo spun a tale of what BoomTown can only describe as a sitcom paranoid fantasy about Microsoft (MSFT).

Essentially accusing Microsoft of trying to grab Yahoo on the cheap, Yahoo mocked its odd-couple “alliance” with Icahn.

“Microsoft’s flip-flops and inconsistencies over the past five months are so stupefying that one can only conclude that Microsoft was never fully committed to acquiring Yahoo,” they wrote.

Doubtless, today or tomorrow will bring a fresh retort from Icahn or Microsoft, full of the same not-so-sweet nothings (and by nothings, I mean nothing).

Read more »

Monday, July 14, 2008

The Full Text of Microsoft’s Statement About Its Most Recent Yahoo Search Talks

Here is the entire statement from Microsoft (MSFT), released this afternoon, about its version of the new proposal it made with the help of activist investor Carl Icahn, who is waging a proxy fight against Yahoo (YHOO):

Read more »

Sunday, July 13, 2008

New Microsoft/Icahn Deal Details Semi-Sweet to Yahoo, Now Turns Sour for All

If you want to get to the heart of the truly dysfunctional relationship between Yahoo and Microsoft, consider the alleged 24-hour deadline that Yahoo claimed Microsoft and its loyal sidekick, activist investor Carl Icahn, gave the company to respond to the pair’s most recent joint proposal to settle their differences.

I say “alleged,” because as in all things related to this takeover mess, the trio disagrees on exactly what even that meant.

Frankly, it’s enough to make one think former President Bill Clinton’s definition of what “is” is makes more sense.

Yahoo (YHOO), in a rather strong statement Saturday night, said Microsoft tried to jam the company into swallowing a semi-sweetened new search deal with a side order of Icahn control.

But Microsoft (MSFT) sources scoff at the notion, noting that they only wanted to try to move a deal forward more quickly than the previous interminable roundelays that have exhausted everyone.

Before we get to this latest disagreement, here are the terms of the new Microsoft/Icahn joint deal to take control of Yahoo’s search business and hand over the rest to Icahn, which, according to numerous sources from both sides, was quickly rejected by Yahoo Saturday.

The deal included:

– $1 billion for Yahoo’s search business and a five-year guarantee of $2.3 billion in search ad revenue, with an option to renew it for another five years at a $1.6 billion minimum;

– An offer by Microsoft to buy $3.9 billion of Yahoo shares, and lend the company $2.8 billion at a five percent interest rate, by taking over a part of its debt. The money would be used to give a special dividend to shareholders;

– An agreement to raise the TAC rate (a payout to Yahoo on each search query) to 85 percent from its former offer of 70 percent, for three years, and to 75 percent after that;

– A plan, unclear as to specifics, to spin off Yahoo’s Asian assets, with money going to shareholders;

– And, last of all and the obvious dealbreaker, Icahn would get control of the rest of the company, which includes the massive content and communications assets. Apparently, one or two current Yahoo board members could possibly stay on. Presumably, Icahn could then strike a deal to merge those with assets of News Corp.’s (NWS) MySpace or Time Warner’s (TWX) AOL. (News Corp. is the owner of Dow Jones and of this site.)

But, Yahoo rejected the proposal in strong terms, especially stressing that it would not negotiate such a big deal under a time constraint.

Here’s Yahoo’s official version, from a statement :

“The proposal was made on Friday evening and Yahoo! was given less than 24 hours to accept the proposal, the fundamental terms of which Microsoft and Mr. Icahn made clear they were unwilling to negotiate.”

And Chairman Roy Bostock piled on: “After negotiating among themselves without the involvement of Yahoo!, Carl Icahn and Microsoft presented us with a ‘take it or leave it’ proposal under which we would be required to restructure the Company, hand over to Microsoft Yahoo!’s valuable search business and to Carl Icahn the rest of the Company, giving us less than 24 hours to respond. It is ludicrous to think that our Board could accept such a proposal.”

Microsoft sources consider the talks much less dramatic that that, noting that Yahoo had been talking to Icahn all week, and especially Thursday, about a new deal to take over Yahoo’s search business, and that an Icahn board was mentioned.

And, they add, Bostock was the one who insisted to Icahn that he needed to talk to Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer directly, even though the software giant had publicly said it was unwilling to do so anymore.

But several times, the trio, along with a passel of bankers and lawyers, did just this, starting last Thursday night and, most significantly, Friday afternoon for 45 minutes.

It was in that call that the three sides discussed the proposal in detail, which included slides sent from Microsoft, although there was no term sheet.

Ballmer, a source close to both Yahoo and Microsoft said, did express being tired of the endless loop Yahoo and Microsoft were caught in and said that he did not want prolonged negotiations to go on.

This was not an ultimatum, according to Microsoft sources, but more of an expression of weariness at a new round of tedious back-and-forth.

“This has just gotten impossible,” said one Microsoft source. “We just wanted to have talks that went somewhere.”

When pressed, some sources close to Yahoo do confirm that they talked extensively to Icahn and then Microsoft. The 24-hour number came about because Ballmer asked Bostock to get back to him the next day, but that it was not exactly what one would call a threat.

“We felt he was saying Microsoft was not willing to put more on the table and, if we agreed to it, it would have been on their terms,” one source explained.

You get the picture–this is how wars start.

And that’s where Yahoo is now headed with Icahn–and by extension, Microsoft–as their proxy fight shifts into high gear heading into Yahoo’s annual meeting on Aug. 1.

What would it take to get Yahoo and Microsoft to come to some sort of rational agreement to strike a partnership of some sort before that?

Well, Sigmund Freud might be a start–or even Dr. Phil at this point–in this warped relationship.

Now, it seems, we’ll be moving directly to Judge Judy.

More on that later today.

About Kara

Kara Swisher started covering digital issues for The Wall Street Journal's San Francisco bureau in 1997 and also wrote the BoomTown column about the sector. With Walt Mossberg, she co-produces and co-hosts D: All Things Digital, a major high-tech and media conference.

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