After
months of leaks and speculation, Verizon Communications Inc. has emerged as the
most likely buyer of Yahoo! Inc.
The
deal, which may be announced in the next few days according to people
familiar with the matter, will likely bring to an end the tumultuous reign of
Chief Executive Officer Marissa Mayer, who tried and failed to re-invent Yahoo
as an independent company. If finalized, the nation’s largest wireless carrier
would add the iconic web pioneer and its millions of daily users to a growing
stable of media properties.
Verizon
is discussing a price close to $5 billion for Yahoo’s core internet business,
one of the people said. While the deal doesn’t include the company’s patents at
this stage, it does include real estate assets. The non-core sale of
intellectual property assets will be sold separately, a person familiar with
the deal said, and won’t be finished for another month at least. They could
fetch “hundreds of millions of dollars,” the person said.
“The
buyer that could make the most out of these assets has apparently won,”
said Roger Entner, an analyst with Recon Analytics LLC. “No one could get
more out of Yahoo’s businesses than Verizon.”
A
representative for Verizon declined to comment. A representative for Sunnyvale,
California-based Yahoo couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.
An
agreement would end a months-long bidding process for Yahoo, which began
earlier this year when Mayer said the company would explore strategic
alternatives, including selling its core assets that once made it the gateway
to the internet.
After
more than three years at the helm without delivering on a turnaround strategy,
Mayer finally bowed to rising shareholder ire after the collapse of a plan to
spin off Yahoo’s stake in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. in a way that would
minimize the tax impact for investors.
Alibaba, the largest e-commerce provider
in China, emerged as the most valuable piece of Yahoo, and investors were
seeking a way to realize some of those gains. After U.S. regulators failed to
give prior approval for the transaction’s tax status, Yahoo was forced to
jettison the plan.
AT&T
Inc. and Quicken Loans Inc. founder Dan Gilbert, as well as buyout firms Vector
Capital Management and TPG were also active in
the bidding process until the end. Yahoo hasn’t told other parties they are out
of the process, according to a person familiar with the negotiations.
Verizon
sees a complementary set of businesses that could find a home alongside its AOL
properties.
With the
wireless industry maturing, Verizon has been buying up internet and advertising
technology companies, including AOL, and presenting itself as the best bet to
take on Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Facebook Inc. in mobile advertising. Yahoo
has millions of users, a collection of websites including Flickr, Tumblr and
Yahoo Finance and Sports and some useful digital-ad tech like Flurry and
BrightRoll. Together with AOL, the new Yahoo under Verizon may have a better
chance of competing in a digital ad market dominated by two big players.
“This
will expand Verizon’s advertising base by 200 million more visitors,” Entner
said. “This will be a large driver of the advertising engine. They also can
collect a whole lot more user data to make the ads more relevant. They will be
in more places with better ads.”
Yahoo
shares were up 0.9 percent at 12:18 p.m. to $39.21. They have gained 18 percent
so far this year.
Source: Bloomberg
Labels: Verizon Nears Deal to Acquire Yahoo, Yahoo! to be sold