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As competition on the online
services market increased over the last years, rumors about secret talks
between Microsoft and Yahoo have started to appear, first two years ago, than
in May last year, and now they’ve re-emerged. Up until now, confirmations of a
Microsoft offer for Yahoo were never made public, but Microsoft Chief Executive
Steve Ballmer finally assumed the ‘guilt’.
“We have great respect for
Yahoo, and together we can offer an increasingly exciting set of solutions for
consumers, publishers and advertisers while becoming better positioned to
compete in the online services market,” Ballmer said in a statement. “We believe
our combination will deliver superior value to our respective shareholders and
better choice and innovation to our customers and industry partners.”
This time it was a $44.6 billion
offer from Microsoft, 62 percent premium above Yahoo’s closing stock price on
Thursday, unconfirmed by Yahoo representatives. Both Yahoo and Microsoft have
had to sit aside and watch Google take over the top spot as most popular search
engine. Separate efforts have been in vain so far… Could a merge do the trick
and overturn Google’s reign?
Yahoo is currently struggling
with a significant drop in share values, and even took into consideration
cutting 1,000 jobs by February this year. It hasn’t been the best end of year
for Yahoo, as sales have dropped 23 percent in the fourth quarter, which ended
December 31. One smart solution to revive Yahoo was combining the search engine
with online advertising, which gave yahoo a glimpse of hope for the year to
come.
A clear reaction to Microsoft’s
offer remains to be seen, but Yahoo might want to take it into consideration,
after the company shares have reached the lowest level in three years. If things
are to go as planned, Microsoft believes the merge could finalize by the second
half of 2008, and is convinced that the investment will save both partners $1
billion annually.
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