There ain’t gonna be no highly diverting no-holds-barred
fight-to-the-finish proxy fight over Yahoo come the company’s stockholders
meeting August 1.
The two sides cut a deal Monday. Yahoo will be giving corporate
raider Carl Icahn – who was threatening to replace the whole Yahoo board with
cronies of his own and oust Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang – three seats on an expanded
11-man board still dominated by current Yahoo management that favors the
anti-Microsoft status quo.
Icahn himself will get a seat and the eight remaining Yahoo
directors will pick the other two from a list of nine nominees that Icahn puts
forward – plus former AOL chief and now a partner in Velocity Interactive Group
Jonathan Miller.
Icahn is supposed to withdraw his rival slate and vote his
own shares (4.98%) for the board slate, which is everyone who’s been there
minus Activision CEO Robert Kotick who is stepping down.
It remains to be seen whether Icahn will continue to
pressure for the removal of Jerry Yang, who has lost Yahoo stockholders a heck
of a lot of money. Presumably Miller is being positioned as Yang’s successor.
Icahn issued a statement via Yahoo saying, “While I continue
to believe that the sale of the whole company or the sale of its search
business in the right transaction must be given full consideration, I share the
view that Yahoo’s valuable collection of assets positions it well to continue
expanding its online leadership and enhancing returns to shareholders.”
The statement suggests the possibility of Microsoft getting
back in the game just got dim or at least dimmer although Icahn did say in his
statement that he was “happy that the board has agreed in the settlement
agreement that any meaningful transaction, including the strategy in dealing
with that transaction, will be fully discussed with the entire board before any
final decision is made.”
The move, after Yahoo rejected at least four offers from
Microsoft – the last a bid by Microsoft and Icahn together for Yahoo’s search
business – took another inch off of Yahoo’s stock price on which much may
ultimately hang. If it really sinks everybody may get a lot more motivated.
Microsoft, which has said it only wants Yahoo’s search
business now, not the whole company, has yet to say anything about the latest
turn of events, which deprives it of the proxy fight leverage
Icahn’s proxy fight failed to enlist Yahoo’s biggest
institutional investors with his failure to produce a viable deal from
Microsoft or a plan to turn the company around.
On Friday Legg Maison Capital Management, which owns 4.4% of
the joint, said it would back Yang and his board.
Yahoo is scheduled to release its Q2 earnings tomorrow.
About Maureen O'Gara Maureen O'Gara the most read technology reporter for the past 20 years, is the Cloud Computing and Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025.
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