Houston Chronicle

Yahoo is said to be near revised deal with Verizon

- By Michael J. de la Merced

SAN FRANCISCO — Soon after Yahoo disclosed the first of two enormous data breaches that threatened to upend a $4.8 billion deal it had reached with Verizon Communicat­ions, the embattled company began to confront an unpleasant potential future.

Yahoo could have battled Verizon to preserve the original price tag, a campaign that could have ended up in a Delaware courtroom and led to months of bitter wrangling. Moreover, that strategy would have run the risk of allowing Verizon to walk away from the purchase altogether.

Instead, Yahoo is close to renegotiat­ing its original deal, choosing to take close to $300 million off the price to preserve the sale, a person with knowledge of the matter said Wednesday.

Under the revised terms, the two companies are expected to share legal responsibi­lity and costs for the data breaches, the person with knowledge of the matter said. The new deal is expected to be announced within days, this person added.

Shares of Yahoo, which had been trading lower Wednesday, surged after Bloomberg reported the renegotiat­ions. The shares closed up 1.4 percent.

Representa­tives for both companies declined to comment on the discussion­s.

Verizon executives had earlier mused publicly about the severity of the Yahoo breaches and whether they had a material effect on the companies’ deal, announced in July.

Analysts, however, said Verizon, a telecommun­ications giant, had plenty of reasons to complete the transactio­n quickly, particular­ly to build up its digital media business.

For Yahoo, salvaging the deal was even more vital. In putting its core internet business up for sale last year, the company sought to end years of questions about its declining business and whether it could effect a turnaround.

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