Skeptical investors are trading Yahoo shares at a 6.5 percent discount to Microsoft's unofficial offer price, but some Wall Street analysts expect the software giant to raise its bid.
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Skeptical investors are trading Yahoo Inc shares at a 6.5 percent discount to Microsoft Corp's unofficial offer price, but some Wall Street analysts expect the software giant to raise its bid.
UBS on Tuesday set a price target for Yahoo shares above Microsoft's
$31 offer and Citi said a raised Microsoft bid was the most likely of
five scenarios it saw for the unfolding drama between the world's
largest software company and the ailing Internet star.
Yahoo shares closed on Tuesday at $28.98, more than $2 below the $31
price Microsoft offered last week. Microsoft shares have dropped about
12 percent since that offer was made, potentially cutting the value of
the half cash, half stock offer.
But UBS set its price target for Yahoo at $34, saying Microsoft "will do what is needed to get this deal done."
"In a hostile deal the acquirer usually does not lead with its best
and final offer and we would not be surprised to see Microsoft sweeten
the pot somewhat to make the decision easier for Yahoo's board," the
investment bank wrote in a note.
Citi has a $31 target price but said the likeliest outcome, at a 40
percent chance, was for Microsoft to raise its bid and make the
acquisition after Yahoo rejected the initial offer.
"It's reasonable to assume that Microsoft might be willing to increase its offer," analyst Mark Mahaney said in a note.
Citi gave a 20 percent probability that Yahoo would accept the
current bid and a 25 percent chance that Yahoo would hire Google Inc
to run its search operations in a lucrative contract. It saw a 10
percent chance regulators would block a deal and a 5 percent chance
another bidder emerged.
Yahoo has said that it would consider the proposal in the context of
its strategic plans. It did not have additional comment on Tuesday.
Yahoo Chief Financial Officer Blake Jorgensen cancelled a
presentation, previously scheduled on Wednesday, at a Thomas Weisel
Partners technology investor conference in San Francisco.
Jorgensen's speech would have been the first public appearance by a Yahoo executive since Microsoft announced its bid.
"The board is working very hard and carefully considering its
options. It is trying to make the right decision," said one source
familiar with the board's actions.
Citi said Microsoft wants Yahoo's Internet advertising abilities,
and that deal synergies would leave the acquisition reasonably priced
even at a higher bid. Moreover, Yahoo has a poison pill provision and
stands to do more for Microsoft if the deal is friendly -- many
analysts have remarked that winning over Yahoo's rank and file would be
key to the deal's success.
Finally, Citi and UBS both said that software company Oracle Corp's recent acquisition of BEA Systems, at a 14 percent premium to its
initial bid, set a possible precedent of how to get a deal done.
(Additional reporting by Eric Auchard in San Francisco and Megan Davies in New York)
(Reporting by Peter Henderson; Editing by Gary Hill/Elizabeth Fullerton)
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