Skip to: Content
Skip to: Site Navigation
Skip to: Search

July 25, 2008 12:04:09 PM CDT



Microsoft Mulls Ways to Up Ante

Posted Feb 11, 08 8:37 AM CST in Technology Business 

(Newser) – Just how hostile Microsoft’s takeover bid for Yahoo becomes is up to one man: Christopher Liddell, the mostly anonymous former banker masterminding the deal, the New York Times reports. Microsoft could simply raise its offer, or it could try some old-fashioned Wall Street strong-arming. “You have to be disciplined and ruthless,” Liddell says. “You have to be willing to walk away.”

Analysts think Microsoft will up its bid, but it could also start leaning on Yahoo through its shareholders, or, for maximum nastiness, try installing proxies on Yahoo’s board. Microsoft probably doesn’t want to get that hostile, sources tell the Wall Street Journal, lest key Yahoo employees leave, but “they are not going to give away the farm,” one analyst said.

Sources New York Times, Wall Street Journal

0 comments | Print E-mail | Digg Seed this on Newsvine Add this link to Del.icio.us StumbleUpon
Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang gives a keynote address at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, in this Jan. 7, 2008 file photo. Yang told employees Wednesday Feb. 6, 2008, that the struggling Internet pioneer...   (Associated Press)
The Yahoo tent at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) is seen in Las Vegas in this Jan. 7, 2008 file photo. Yahoo Inc.'s board reportedly called a special meeting Friday to discuss the slumping Internet...   (Associated Press)
Microsoft Corp. CFO Chris Liddell, left, New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and Microsoft General Manager of New Zealand Helen Robinson, pause before beginning a tour...   (Associated Press)
« Prev« Prev | Next »Next » Slideshow
Our editors also recommend:

Threads (1 of 4)



Loading...

Loading...

Today's Most Popular


Other Business Stories

What is Newser?

2008 Codie Finalist

Newser gives you more news in less time. We search for the best and most important stories all over the web, read them for you, and deliver concise and sharp summaries—along with links to the full text. Newser provides a way to stay on top of an ever-expanding horizon of news and opinion—politics, sports, business, trends, technology, personalities, crimes, and controversies. Newser keeps you not just better informed, but, with our signature graphic interface and smart condensed format, more enjoyably informed.

Learn more »