Hours after arch rival Google ditched its search advertising partnership with Yahoo, Yahoo CEO Yang said he remains open to selling the Internet company to Microsoft, but at the right price. Will Microsoft still be interested?SAN FRANCISCO
(Reuters) - After nearly a year spent seeking alternatives to Microsoft
Corp's buyout offer, Yahoo Inc's Chief Executive Jerry Yang said he
believes a deal between the two is still the best option for the
beleaguered Internet company.
Speaking at the Web 2.0 Summit hours after archrival Google Inc
ditched its search advertising partnership with Yahoo, Yang said he
remains open to selling the Internet company to Microsoft, but at the
right price.
"People who know me know I don't have an ego about remaining
independent versus not remaining independent," the embattled executive
told the gathering.
Yang also said he remains "open-minded" about selling Yahoo's search
business to Microsoft, but noted that there was no "new news" on talks
between the two companies.
Microsoft had offered to buy Yahoo's search business after withdrawing an offer for the whole company in May.
Yahoo shares surged on Wednesday after a rumor posted on a blog said
Yahoo and Microsoft were in advanced talks to sell the company for
between $17 and $19 a share. The blog also reported that Yang would
step down from his CEO position.
Yahoo officials later said the report was untrue.
Yahoo's stock price is currently trading far below the $31-a-share
Microsoft originally offered, and the company has come under severe
criticism from investors for turning down the software giant's offer.
Yang also declined to comment on Yahoo's discussions with Time
Warner Inc about buying its AOL division, which sources have told
Reuters are ongoing.
Instead, the Yahoo co-founder spelled out his vision for the
company, which includes becoming a one-stop consumer brand that lets
people access what they want on the Internet.
Yang also said he was disappointed at Google's decision to walk away
from the search pact. The two companies signed the deal in June when
Yahoo was looking for ways to build an independent growth strategy.
The search deal was expected to add $800 million in annual revenue for Yahoo.
But Google, concerned that the U.S. Department of Justice would
block the agreement on antitrust grounds, decided to withdraw from the
partnership on Wednesday.
Responding to a question about whether he had any regrets about
stepping into the CEO role last year, Yang said: "I don't regret a
moment of what happened even though it's not been the most fun thing."
(Editing by Bernard Orr)
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