Ha ha!
Seems Icahn can't make his extra millions after all at the expense of all the other shareholders.
Despite continued resentment over the aborted merger with Microsoft, Yahoo! shareholders have reelected the company's entire board of directors. At today's annual meeting in San Jose, each of the web giant's nine directors received the support of at least 78 per cent of the voting shares. Roughly 85 per cent backed CEO Jerry …
Msoft knows that it cannot perform well in the online world without something as big as Yahoo!. Yahoo! is indeed having its share of problems however they are not bereft of innovative ideas which drive the online world. Therefore Yahoo! I believe should not hurry to sell itself as there would be plenty of business as well as merging opportunities coming its way in the future. It's Msoft which has to worry. They simply do not understand the online world and due to the inherent conflict between their Windows/Office/Desktop applications and Online businesses it would take some real thinking on Ballmer's part to strategize from here. Throwing in money is what Msoft it doing and I believe would keep on doing to pretend that it has some good ideas up its sleeves.
Since Icahn is now part of the "main ticket", this is EXACTLY what everyone (MS included) was expecting.
The expected split was based on Icahn offering his own candidates everywhere - the 95% that voted for the existing director that Icahn replaced were actually voting FOR Icahn, and therefore (effectively) the merger strategy.
When there's no real competition, really high percentages are what you're going to get.
"When there's no real competition, really high percentages are what you're going to get."
Aye, like the 35% turnout in the last UK election was because we forgot, not because we had the choice of:
a) New Labour (ie New Conservative)
b) Conservative (ie New New Labour)
c) Liberals (ie We Don't Know Party)
And to the other AC:
Share prices for MS have gone down. Bank shares are dropping. etc. Should all the CEO's be kicked to the kerb? And, since they all get jobs as CEO at another company anyway, isn't this really going to be a game of musical chairs for the CEOs?
Well, Yang and Bostock aren't as popular as it seems as they 'conveniently' forgot to count 100 million votes..
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/7544326.stm
I don't think i'll trust them with my online portfolio any more - unless they put a few million in it for me.
What!!! There's more to Yahoo than the Microsoft battle????
With so much focus on Yahoo’s ongoing skirmishes with Microsoft, here's a webinar that walks through their Enterprise Performance Management strategy and architecture and discusses how they have successfully implemented a project to help Yahoo efficiently manage change in a highly competitive market.
https://staranalyticsevents.webex.com/ec0600l/eventcenter/recording/recordAction.do?theAction=poprecord&actname=%2Feventcenter%2Fframe%2Fg.do&apiname=lsr.php&actappname=ec0600l&entappname=url0106l&needFilter=false&&isurlact=true&rID=23458567&entactname=%2FnbrRecordingURL.do&rKey=938D0C3FDA4E314D&recordID=23458567&siteurl=staranalyticsevents&rnd=1591930540&SP=EC&AT=pb&format=short
Kimberley B
Finance System Innovators blogger