Yahoo taps investment banks for possible sale
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Yahoo’s board has hired three investment banking firms to evaluate potential bids for its Internet operations in the clearest sign yet that CEO Marissa Mayer may not have much more time to turn around the struggling company.
The move announced Friday comes 2 1/ 2 weeks af- ter Yahoo disclosed it would consider “strategic alternatives” while Mayer cuts costs through mass layoffs, office closures and a purge of unprofitable products.
Mayer believes the overhaul will boost profits and sharpen Yahoo’s focus on mobile apps and other services most likely to revive the company’s revenue growth after years of decline.
Some Yahoo shareholders frustrated with a steep drop in the company’s stock price have been pushing for a sale of the Internet operations instead.
The board has now responded to that pressure by hiring investment bankers Goldman Sachs, J. P. Morgan and PJT Partners to set up a process for meeting with companies interested in buying all or parts of Yahoo’s business. A special committee of Yahoo’s directors will discuss the options with the bankers and the company’s legal advisers, Cravath, Swaine and Moore.
While the board mulls those alternatives, Mayer will continue to pursue a turnaround plan that includes jettisoning 15 percent of Yahoo’s workforce.
“We believe that pursuing these complementary paths is in the best interests of our shareholders and will maximize value,” Yahoo chairman Maynard Webb said in a statement.
Mayer also is trying to spin off Yahoo’s Internet operations into a newly created company while leaving behind prized stakes in Alibaba Group, a rapidly growing Internet company in China and Yahoo Japan. The proposed spinoff might not be completed until next year, if Yahoo’s Internet business isn’t sold before then.
Yahoo Inc. didn’t identify any of the potential bidders that it might meet. Verizon Communications has publicly said it might be interested in buying parts of the company after paying $4.4 billion last year to snap up another fading Internet company, AOL Inc.
Analysts believe Yahoo’s other likely suitors may include AT& T, Comcast and various private equity firms that specialize in snapping up troubled companies with wellknown brands such as Yahoo.