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Take the Money and Run: Why Google Deal Is Good for Yahoo

Posted Jun 13, 2008 11:06am EDT by Henry Blodget in Investing, Internet, Venture Capital, M and A, IPOs

From Silicon Alley Insider, June 13, 2008:

Enough with the trendy Yahoo bashing (YHOO). This is actually a smart deal--way better than the wacky chop-shop plan Microsoft proposed (Microsoft offered to buy 16% of Yahoo for $35? So what? What good does that do anyone? And how were they ever going to separate the search business, anyway?).

In this deal, Yahoo gets:

  • $250-$450 of additional free cash flow in Year 1. That's a lot of cash flow! Especially because it doesn't cost Yahoo anything.
  • More cash flow in years 2-4, as the deal ramps and Yahoo's search-query share remains meaningful (And some cash flow in years 4-10 with almost no cost, as Yahoo's search-query share dwindles).
  • The ability to maintain or phase out Panama as it sees fit. Assuming the Google deal delivers, we expect Yahoo to phase out Panama over the next couple of years, especially as its search share shrinks. It won't tell the regulators this, of course, because then it would be easier for Microsoft to argue (correctly) that this deal will crush Google's competition. But it will always have that option.
  • The ability to strike a death-blow to the one other player in the search market with any kind of meaningful share--Microsoft. Microsoft is toast anyway in search, but if it had bought Yahoo it would have been able to hold on a bit longer. Now it has not only not bought Yahoo--it has sent Yahoo into the arms of the enemy.
  • A perfectly defensible deal structure that the regulators shouldn't have any real cause to block. (This doesn't mean Microsoft won't scare the regulators into delaying the process for months, of course).
  • The freedom to focus on display advertising and AMP, Yahoo's new display serving platform. Yahoo has already lost the search game to Google, and denying that isn't going to help anyone. So it might as well let Google take care of search and focus on what it's still good at--display.

No, this deal won't save Yahoo. Yahoo's search query share is likely to continue to decline, and, as it does, no amount of "monetization" improvement-per-query will matter. But in the years that its search business has left, Yahoo can now focus almost all of its efforts on revitalizing its properties and display business, which is where its future lies.

Yahoo shareholders will likely have to wait a long while to get back to the $34-$35 Jerry could have had for the asking in mid-February. But with this deal and strong execution over the next few years, there's a good chance they won't be waiting in vain forever.

See Also: At Long Last...The Yahoo-Google Search Deal

24 Comments

slim
slim - Friday June 13, 2008 03:29PM EDT

Yahoo had 2 great opportunities to sell. The first at $ 40 per share, the second at $33. They did every thing possible and imaginable to thwart the deal. Now they realize the mess with all the money left behind. The so-called independant board think by cashing in millions on the mid-term haul, they'll shut off the shareholder mutiny. Good for the short term but this would kill yahoo serch engine and minimize shareholder value. The big winner by far is Google. Yahoo stockholders, sell now before it's too late.

Yahoo! Finance User
Yahoo! Finance User - Friday June 13, 2008 03:57PM EDT

Do I see another AOL? At least part of title is correct: Take money and run --- away!

Melisa
Melisa - Friday June 13, 2008 04:41PM EDT

Outsourcing search ads to Google isn't a good idea, but at least it is better than selling it to Microsoft. We all know what a failure Microsoft is when it comes to online business. To shareholders, of course a deal with Microsoft is good "Paying a price that Yahoo had not archive in many years". But to Yahoo themselves, Microsoft will not bring them any good in the long run.

O
O - Saturday June 14, 2008 11:50PM EDT

You all are missing the point. Yahoo! has the right to allow Google to monetize as much or as little of their search result pages as they like in this deal. It could be 1%, 5%, 20%, 100%, you don't know. The real prize for Yahoo! out there is if they can continue to be the leader in display as they innovate the market into a more lucrative opportunity, which they are doing with AMP.

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