Microsoft Pri0
Welcome to Microsoft Pri0: That's Microspeak for top priority, and that's the news and observations you'll find here from Seattle Times reporter Sharon Chan.
May 15, 2008 10:29 AM
Microsoft quietly watching as Ichan raids Yahoo
Posted by Benjamin J. Romano
The billionaire financier Carl Ichan today disclosed his 4.4 percent stake in Yahoo and his plans to oust the company's directors in a bid to take control and sell Yahoo to Microsoft. In his letter to Yahoo, sent 12 days after Microsoft dropped its bid to acquire the company, Ichan writes that Yahoo's board "acted irrationally and lost the faith of shareholders and Microsoft."
Microsoft, meanwhile, is quietly watching the scenario unfold.
A Microsoft spokesman had no comment this morning.
Ichan hammered on Yahoo's board in his letter, addressed to Chairman Roy Bostock.
"It is quite obvious that Microsoft's bid of $33 per share is a superior alternative to Yahoo's prospects on a standalone basis. I am perplexed by the board's actions. It is irresponsible to hide behind management's more than overly optimistic financial forecasts. It is unconscionable that you have not allowed your shareholders to choose to accept an offer that represented a 72% premium over Yahoo's closing price of $19.18 on the day before the initial Microsoft offer."
The renowned corporate raider disclosed the following moves in the last 10 days:
-- The purchase of approximately 59 million shares and share-equivalents of Yahoo.-- Formation of a 10-person slate to stand for election against the current board at Yahoo's July 3 stockholder meeting. (The deadline to submit candidates is today and Ichan said he was doing so formally in a separate letter.)
-- The seeking of antitrust clearance to buy up to $2.5 billion worth of Yahoo stock.
Before and since Microsoft dropped its bid for Yahoo, the one-time Internet kingpin reportedly had been exploring other deals with Time Warner's AOL unit and Google. Yahoo even tested outsourcing its U.S. Internet search advertising to Google. And, when Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer explained why he was dropping the bid for Yahoo, he cited the possibility of a deeper search advertising partnership between Yahoo and Google as a prime reason.
Ichan, in his letter, cautioned Yahoo against pursuing any "strategic alternatives" that would "impede a future Microsoft merger" without allowing shareholders to weigh in, at the least.
"I sincerely hope you heed the wishes of your shareholders and move expeditiously to negotiate a merger with Microsoft, thereby making a proxy fight unnecessary," Ichan concluded.
Jul 1, 08 - 11:45 AM
Microsoft buying natural-language search company Powerset
Jun 30, 08 - 05:16 PM
Report: Microsoft to cut Xbox 360 price ahead of big industry event
Jun 27, 08 - 03:52 PM
Gates send-off: Gates has had Ballmer's back from the beginning
Jun 27, 08 - 01:09 PM
Gates send-off: Photos
Jun 27, 08 - 11:48 AM
Gates send-off: Two guys and 90,000 employees

(Courtesy of LeMay — America's Car Museum) New LeMay exhibit to look at NASCAR LeMay — America's Car Museum in Tacoma will look at the wil...
Post a comment

- Exclusive: Microsoft loses last Xbox founder, mobile PC visionary | Brier Dudley's Blog
- In Person: Manure entrepreneur Kevin Maas turns dairy waste into green energy
- Theater review | A strong ensemble brings to life the down-and-out in "Of Mice and Men"
- Brain-cancer center at Swedish maps tumors to design treatment
- A trail around Seattle's Lake Union will be named for native canoe-maker Cheshiahud | Now & Then
- Learning to sharpen knives takes patience and blood | Taste
- American Fran Crippen dies in open-water race | Swimming
- Michelle Obama's family: From slavery to White House
- Small error halts big ramp on Spokane Street Viaduct
- Former Tukwila official David Fenton mourned
- UW Medicine, Catholic health system to have ‘strategic affiliation’
- Kemper Freeman plans $1.2 billion expansion in Bellevue
- UW expands online courses, this time from Harvard, MIT
- Amazon’s plan for giant spheres gets mixed reaction
- China’s wealthy paying cash for Eastside luxury homes
- Italy on the plate by way of Ballard | Taste
- Earthquake scenarios show potential for huge damage, loss of life
- Merchants sing blues over Seattle waterfront projects
- Bellevue native Ariel Pocock celebrates sizzling jazz debut
- deafReview gives a voice to deaf consumers

July
| Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
| 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 |
Bill Gates, who last week ended his full-time involvement with Microsoft, was often right. He made a career, a company and an industry by looking over the horizon.









Posted by bonghit
12:07 PM, May 15, 2008
Yeah, that's Icahn, you idiots.