雅虎公司现CEO杨致远给雅虎的股东们发了一封电子邮件,声称雅虎将作价每股33美元卖给微软,这场拖延了近半年的交易终于有望画上句号。
其中最重要的一小节大意为:我们将把整个公司作价每股33美元(或以上)买给微软,如果微软愿意要的话。
如果想看原文,请继续:
Dear Fellow Stockholder:
The
recently-formed Carl Icahn-Microsoft alliance continues to make
misleading statements about their plans for Yahoo!. Your Board of
Directors believes strongly that the Icahn-Microsoft agenda -as
presented to us jointly last week - will destroy stockholder value at
Yahoo!, serving only their very narrow special interests, clearly not
your interests.
Your Board continues to work to maximize value for you and is taking the following steps to do so:
– Moving forward with our strategic plan and strategies to lead in online advertising - with both search and display;
– Preparing to implement our recently signed commercial agreement with Google that will increase cash flow;
– Continuing to explore other ways to unlock value and return value to you such as unlocking the value of our Asia assets; and
–
Remaining open to negotiating a value creating transaction (including
with Microsoft) that provides real and certain value - not just the
possibility of value.
In contrast, let’s review Carl Icahn’s brief involvement with the Company to date.
Carl
Icahn bought his stock two months ago for an estimated average cost of
less than $25 per share. He is well-known as a corporate agitator with
a short-term approach to his investments. His short-term approach gives
Mr. Icahn a strong incentive to strike any deal with Microsoft that
enables him to recover his investment and get back his money quickly,
even a deal that does not provide full and fair value to you. Is that
in the interests of all stockholders? Clearly, it is not.
Mr. Icahn has severely handicapped himself in his ability to negotiate a favorable transaction with Microsoft. Why?
–
Mr. Icahn has made it clear that his only objective is to sell part or
all of Yahoo! to Microsoft. That fact, combined with his lack of an
operating plan going forward, means that he will have no leverage to
negotiate a fair deal with Microsoft. He has set himself up for
failure.
– Second, Mr. Icahn and his slate lack the working
knowledge of Yahoo! and its Internet business needed to do two things
that are required to successfully deliver a value-enhancing transaction
for Yahoo! stockholders. First, they do not have the detailed knowledge
to negotiate a complex restructuring of a large, innovative high
technology company in a rapidly changing environment. Second, they do
not have the hands-on experience to manage and lead Yahoo! during the
approximately one year period estimated to be required to gain
regulatory approval for a deal or to manage and lead the remainder of
the Company (non-search) after a transaction is completed. Don’t take
our word for that. Mr. Icahn will be calling the shots if his slate
wins and yet Mr. Icahn himself told the Wall Street Journal last fall:
“Technology hasn’t really been one of the things I’ve focused on too
much before” and “It’s hard to understand these technology companies.”
That’s why you need a knowledgeable, experienced and independent board
to represent your interests vis-a-vis Microsoft.
Mr. Icahn
can’t make up his mind about what he thinks will work for Yahoo!. He
bought his position believing that he could bring Microsoft back to buy
all of Yahoo!, at one point suggesting we publicly offer to sell Yahoo!
to Microsoft for $34.375. But he didn’t do enough due diligence to
determine what your Board already knew: that it was Microsoft’s
decision to walk away and that it had rebuffed repeated efforts by your
independent directors to get a whole company acquisition back on the
table. Recognizing that a sale to Microsoft might not be an option, Mr.
Icahn said as an alternative that we should enter into an agreement
with Google (which we were already negotiating and subsequently
signed), and that we should walk away from Microsoft’s search-only
proposal (which we did after careful evaluation of that proposal).
Then, in an extraordinary flip flop, Mr. Icahn teamed up with Microsoft
and embraced their latest joint search-only proposal–even though it
involved significant execution and operational risks and was fraught
with flaws that made the “headline value” asserted by Microsoft and Mr.
Icahn more illusion than reality.
How can Yahoo! stockholders
trust Mr. Icahn to deliver what he claims he can deliver when his
actions have been so contradictory -and when all he has delivered so
far is a risky proposal of questionable value from his new friends at
Microsoft? Yes, the Microsoft/Icahn proposal is somewhat of an
improvement over Microsoft’s last search-only proposal, but no one
should confuse a modestly improved offer with a good offer. The
Icahn/Microsoft proposal was more “smoke and mirrors” than objective
reality.
Now let’s turn to the recent marriage of convenience between Microsoft and Mr. Icahn.
This
“odd couple” collaboration - between two parties with keenly different
agendas - is indeed perplexing. Why does Mr. Icahn believe he can count
on Microsoft to complete a transaction? Certainly Microsoft is a
well-respected and successful company and we have been clear that we
are fully prepared to do a deal with them. But Microsoft’s flip flops
and inconsistencies over the past five months are so stupefying that
one can only conclude that Microsoft was never fully committed to
acquiring Yahoo! either because:
– Microsoft can’t decide what is and isn’t strategically important to its online business; or
–
Microsoft is more interested in destabilizing a key competitor so that
it can either enhance its competitive position or buy our highly
valuable search business–and the enormously desirable intellectual
property associated with it –at a bargain basement price.
Microsoft
desperately needs to improve the performance of its online services
business (consisting of its search and display assets) which,
cumulatively since 2003, has lost money despite billions of dollars of
investment. And yet Mr. Icahn would ignore this track record and its
implications for his fellow Yahoo! stockholders, swallowing a deal that
leaves Yahoo!’s future dependent, in part, on Microsoft’s ability to
monetize search. And, as Mr. Icahn has himself pointed out, it would
eliminate any opportunity we may have to sell the entire Company for an
attractive premium.
In contrast to the conflicting and
confusing statements emanating from the Icahn-Microsoft alliance, your
Board and management have been crystal clear about our position.
First,
we will sell the entire Company to Microsoft for $33 per share or more
if Microsoft will negotiate a transaction that delivers certainty of
value and certainty of closing. This is the simplest, most
straightforward way to maximize value for you.
Second, we
remain open to selling only search to Microsoft as long as it provides
real value to our stockholders and resolves the substantial execution
and operational risks associated with the separation of our search and
display businesses.
Third, your Board takes seriously its
obligation to examine all value-creating steps it could take and
continues to actively examine many of these now, including a potential
spin-off of our Asia assets and a return of cash to stockholders. These
are steps Yahoo! could take, if we determine they are feasible and in
our stockholders’ best interests, without any “help” from Microsoft or
Mr. Icahn. But they are complex steps that require care and prudence.
These should not be adopted simply because Mr. Icahn and Microsoft are
trying to dress up Microsoft’s inadequate search-only proposal.
While
your Board continues to evaluate the foregoing avenues, your current
Board and management continue to execute on our strategy to grow the
value of our unique collection of assets. That strategy is working and
we believe it can result in substantial double digit growth in
operating cash flow as we move forward. Our recently executed search
advertising agreement with Google reflects our commitment to achieving
our strategic goals, while preserving flexibility to pursue a sale of
the Company or even, on the right terms, a sale of our search business.
Please compare and contrast the straightforward, responsible
actions and positions of your Board of Directors with the behavior of
Mr. Icahn and Microsoft.
There you have the situation, as we
see it, put as simply and clearly as we can. We believe the Icahn slate
and agenda present significant risk to your investment in Yahoo!. We
believe you cannot count on Microsoft to bail out Mr. Icahn’s misguided
agenda, at least not on terms that are in the best interests of Yahoo!
stockholders.
In contrast, your Board remains fully prepared
to represent your interests aggressively and conscientiously in the
effort to maximize value–whether that takes the form of negotiating a
transaction that provides full and fair value, with certainty; finding
other ways to unlock and return value to you; or moving forward with
our accelerated strategies to lead in online advertising.
Your
Board of Directors remains committed to maximizing stockholder value.
It is–and will remain–our number one priority. Do not be fooled into
thinking otherwise by Carl Icahn.
We strongly urge you to vote your WHITE Proxy Card today for your current Board of Directors.
Thank you for your support.
Roy Bostock Jerry Yang
Chairman of the Board Chief Executive Officer
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