Google: No advertising deal with Yahoo
Yahoo had been banking on a search advertising alliance with Google, but has been left at the altar. Tech analysts say now it must work out a deal of some kind with Microsoft, whose $47.5 billion takeover offer Yahoo spurned earlier.
On Wednesday, Google dropped out of a proposed partnership that would have shown some Google ads on Yahoo pages. It did so because “it’s clear that government regulators and some advertisers continue to have concerns,” Google Senior Vice President David Drummond said on a company blog.
The Justice Department told the companies it would sue to block the agreement on antitrust concerns. Yahoo says it will go forward solo, but tech analysts don’t think that’s realistic.
“Investors have punished Yahoo for not taking the (Microsoft) offer the first time around,” says Greg Sterling, an analyst at Sterling Market Intelligence. “They can’t wait out the recession and hope things turn around.”
Microsoft, in a statement, hailed the end of the Yahoo-Google deal but declined further comment.
Scott Kessler, an analyst at Standard & Poor’s, says Yahoo is worth about $15 billion, based on its current stock price.
The $47.5 billion Microsoft once offered “was a fair offer at the time,” he says. “Back then, Microsoft needed Yahoo more than Yahoo needed Microsoft. Now it’s a different story.”
JPMorgan analyst Imran Khan, in a note to investors, suggests Yahoo should just sell its search business to Microsoft. Yahoo’s current initiatives “will not prevent further declines,” Khan says. Source
This entry was posted on Thursday, November 6th, 2008 at 4:12 pm and is filed under Daily Finance. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.




















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