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Carl Icahn, the billionaire investor who has announced the
buying of 50 million Yahoo shares, made public his plans of trying to change
the Yahoo board of directors. The deadline of the nominations for the following
elections is due Thursday. It seems that one of the people the billionaire is
trying to sack is no other that the search engine giant’s CEO, Jerry Yang.
The move comes as a response to Yahoo’s board of directors’
decision to decline a takeover offer made by Microsoft valued at about $47.5
billion dollars. Microsoft’s initial bid of $31 a share was raised to $33, but
Yahoo’s board, led by Mr. Yang wanted no less than $37. Under these conditions,
Microsoft closed the negotiations and declared that it has no further interest
in acquiring the company.
Mr. Icahn is hoping
that replacing Yahoo’s present management with people that are more open to
reopening negotiations with Microsoft might lure the software company back to
the negotiations table. The investor hopes to make a profit thanks to the fact that
a possible takeover by Microsoft will increase the value of Yahoo’s shares.
Microsoft has shown increased interest in the search engine
and online advertised market in the last few years. The market is supposed to
double its value by 2010 thus reaching $80 billion. Google now has about two
thirds of it, while Yahoo, the next biggest player owns about 21.3 percent,
more than twice the value Microsoft has.
The billionaire that tries to push the companies back to
negotiating has a history of changing the strategies of the companies he
invests in so that he makes a profit. While in March he persuaded Motorola to
split into two companies, early this year he orchestrated BAE Systems’ takeover
by Oracle.
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