Skip to main content

Microsoft Abandons Yahoo Takeover

Microsoft Abandons Yahoo Takeover

After three dramatic months, Microsoft has officially ended its bid to take over Internet giant Yahoo because the companies failed to agree on a price. According to reports, Microsoft’s withdrawal from the proposed deal follows a breakdown in talks Saturday morning: at the meeting in Seattle, Microsoft offered to increase its offer from $31 per share to $33 per share—which would sweeten the deal by about $5 billion—but Yahoo reportedly wouldn’t accept a price below $37 a share. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and platforms and services president Kevin Johnson attended the meeting, as did Yahoo co-founders Jerry Yang and David Filo.

In a statement released Saturday evening, Microsoft indicated it will not attempt a hostile takeover of Yahoo by nominating its own slate of directors or taking its offer directly to shareholders. “[It] is clear to me that it is not sensible for Microsoft to take our offer directly to your shareholders,” Ballmer wrote. “This approach would necessarily involve a protracted proxy contest and eventually an exchange offer. Our discussions with you have led us to conclude that, in the interim, you would take steps that would make Yahoo undesirable as an acquisition for Microsoft.”

Recommended Videos

In a separate statement, Yahoo chairman Roy Bostock responded: “From the beginning of this process, our independent board and our management have been steadfast in our belief that Microsoft’s offer undervalued the company and we are pleased that so many of our shareholders joined us in expressing that view.”

The two companies will continue to go their separate ways, but the three-month dance may have some long-term consequences for both companies. Industry watchers see Microsoft making a series of smaller acquisitions—of course, compared to $40 billion, almost any acquisition will be smaller—to bolster its online advertising and search marketing businesses. Yahoo, in turn, may find unexpected synergies have developed as a result of its two-week experiment running Google ads on Yahoo sites. “This process has underscored our unique and valuable strategic position,” wrote Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang in a statement. “With the distraction of Microsoft’s unsolicited proposal now behind us, we will be able to focus all of our energies on executing the most important transition in our history so that we can maximize our potential to the benefit of our shareholders, employees, partners and users.”

Of course, Microsoft may also come courting Yahoo again…especially if Jerry Yang can’t deliver promised revenues to shareholders within a few quarters. If Yahoo’s stock price sags low enough, Yahoo investors may swoon over a renewed Microsoft takeover effort—even at a substantially lower price.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Microsoft warns that the latest Windows 11 update may crash PC games now
Gaming PC on a desk.

Microsoft has once again temporarily halted the rollout of its latest major Windows 11 update, also known as 24H2. This time it is for systems running select Ubisoft games following widespread user reports of crashes and performance issues. The affected titles include Assassin's Creed Valhalla, Assassin's Creed Origins, Assassin's Creed Odyssey, Star Wars Outlaws, and Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora.

Common complaints include black screens, freezing, and unresponsiveness during gameplay or while loading these titles. "I just bought a new gaming laptop with RTX 4080, Intel i9 14900hx. I can't play the game (Origins) even for 5 minutes because it crashes to a black screen, with audio, and the only way to close it is from task manager. Impossible to play," one user shared on Reddit. Others reported similar frustrations, citing the persistent error “NTDLL.dll” that renders their games unplayable.

Read more
With Copilot Actions, Microsoft brings AI agents to Outlook, Teams, and more
microsoft expanding ai agents 365 copilot early 2025 actions2

Microsoft plans to roll out a slew of new features for its business-facing 365 Copilot products starting early next year, the company announced during its Microsoft Ignite 2024 event on Tuesday.

365 Copilot, which was rebranded from just Copilot in September, enables businesses to incorporate Microsoft Copilot generative AI into its Microsoft 365 family of apps (as well as in Teams) for a $30/employee/month subscription.

Read more
Microsoft calls Recall one of ‘the most secure experiences’ it’s ever built
Recall promotional image.

As part of its Ignite 2024 announcements, Microsoft has provided an update on how its AI-powered Recall feature will work in the context of an IT department. Noting that the company has "heard your feedback," specifically in terms of it needing it to be more "secure and controllable," Microsoft claims to have gotten its ducks in a row for the launch of its controversial new Windows 11 feature.

Microsoft says that Recall "will ship with meaningful security enhancements, including additional layers of data encryption and Windows Hello protection, making it one of the most secure experiences we have ever built." Whether or not this will be enough to satisfy the security community, however, is still to be determined.

Read more