- Apple Tells Us Everything Without Saying Anything
- Amazon's Tall Order for Earnings
- Sue Decker Sounds Off on Yahoo, Icahn, Microsoft
- Yahoo Underwhelms; Ready to Deal?
- Earnings Preview: Yahoo's Future Hangs In The Balance
- Steve Jobs "Health" Issue Just Gets Curiouser And Curiouser
- Apple: Even With Disappointment, Still Good For Long Term
- Preview: Apple Earnings Not Just About iPhone
- Yahoo Settles With Icahn But What's Next?
- IBM Earnings Beat Street--Big Time
- Mad Mail: Buy a House – Now
- Lightning Round OT: Las Vegas Sands, CapitalSource and More
- Lightning Round: FuelCell, Microsoft, eBay and More
- Fast & Furious Trades: Microsoft, Lilly, Dow...
- Market Pans Panera Bread
- Commander Planet: Unexpected Green Trade!
- Emerging Money: These Colors Don’t Run
- Is GE the New Citigroup?
- Pops & Drops: Hershey, Pepsi...
- Lilly Profit Rises, But Company Cuts 2008 Forecast
- Ford Loses $8.7 Billion; Moving to Smaller Cars
- Is Water the Oil of the 21st Century?
- Dow Chemical Profit Hurt by High Energy Costs
- Daimler Cuts Earnings Outlook, Shares Plunge
- Canon Profit Drops 12% on Strong Yen
- European Economic Data Reveals Bleak Picture
- Euro Shares Extend Losses as US Futures Fall
- Qualcomm Profit Rises on Web-Phone Demand

![]() |
CNBC.com |
When in doubt, delay! At least that appears to be the strategy at Yahoo where the company's board of directors has authorized a deadline extension for outsiders to nominate their own slate of directors, which would have been next week.
The new deadline will now be 10 days after the company announces the date of its annual shareholder meeting.
In case you think this could go on forever, remember that this clock indeed is ticking. Yahoo [YHOO
Loading...
()
] is incorporated in the state of Delaware, where bylaws dictate that a company must hold an annual meeting no less than every 13 months. Yahoo's last shareholder meeting was June 12, which means the next one can come any time between now and July 12.
In a statement, Yahoo said the extension would allow its board "to continue to explore all of its strategic alternatives for maximizing value for stockholders without the distraction of a proxy contest."
There have been several reports these last couple of days that has Yahoo engaged in advanced discussions with Time Warner [TWX
Loading...
()
] to fold its AOL unit into Yahoo while TW takes a large, but still minority, stake in Yahoo as part of the deal.
No one is commenting, but it begs the question: AOL has suffered its fair share of problems trying to compete in the market. Yahoo has suffered its fair share of problems trying to compete in the market. Microsoft [MSFT
Loading...
()
] has suffered its fair share of problems trying to compete in the market. But Microsoft has offered nearly $45 billion, a 62 percent premium for Yahoo, so it can better compete in the online world, particularly against Google [GOOG
Loading...
()
] .
Yahoo has made no secret that it does not want to cozy up with Microsoft. Yahoo's Jerry Yang is Microsoft-averse.
But personal opinions, hopes, dreams and desires aside, can you honestly tell me that a Yahoo/Time Warner/AOL arrangement will be more lucrative for Yahoo shareholders than a 62 percent premium from Microsoft on the table right now? I mean, come on! That's a tough sell....unless...
Unless Time Warner decides to value its purported "minority stake" in Yahoo dramatically higher than $31 a share. I say dramatically because the minority stake ought to come at a premium since there's still the uncertainty that a Yahoo/AOL deal will actually be effective in the market. Microsoft is a sure thing: Yahoo shareholders get their money and they can move on. Deal done. Bird in the hand.
The New York Times says a combined Yahoo/AOL deal has the backing of Google, which holds a 5 percent stake in AOL. Well, duh. Google will back any deal for Yahoo that doesn't include Microsoft. Which could be a red flag for investors that if Google, which has to compete with whatever ends up happening to Yahoo, is giving the nod to this arrangement over one with Microsoft, it is, by definition then, the weaker competitor to Google. Which is the reason why Google is backing it over Microsoft's hostile bid.
Either way, Yahoo shares are climbing higher today, as investors bank on a bidding war, which Microsoft has said it has no interest in. Microsoft's blow-out offer right out of the gate is going to be tough to beat. Yahoo can keep trying, but sights are set, and the clock is ticking. Proxy war or not, Yahoo's shareholder meeting could end up being one of the hottest tickets in town.
Questions? Comments?





