My Photo

Email me

My Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter

    Google Content Search

    Content Matters Community

    Content Links

    • AlacraBlog
    • AlacraWiki
    • billtrippe.com
    • ContentBiz
    • E-Media Tidbits
    • eContent Magazine
    • InfoCommerce
    • ONLINE Insider
    • PaidContent.org
    • Research Recap
    • Seth Godin Blog
    • Shore Communications
    • That We Know
    • The Content Wrangler
    • Web Ink Now
    Blog powered by TypePad

    Syndication and Reuse

    • Creative Commons License
      This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License.

    Facebook

    Content Industry Jobroll

    • Jobs from Indeed

    « Amazon Sues NYS Over Sales Tax Issue | Main | Ann Michael Joins Really Strategies »

    May 05, 2008

    More Rumblings on MicroNoo

    Lots of blog posts and tweets on the Microsoft (NASD:MSFT) - Yahoo (NASD:YHOO) breakup this morning.  If the market closed now (1pm EST), my prediction in Fred's poll would have nailed it:

    I pegged it at $24, though I think it may initially trade down to the $21-22 range before trading back up to a close of $24-25.

    So, while I'm on a hot streak (one in a row), I'll throw a few more predictions out there:

    1. Jerry Yang will step down by December as the stock languishes in the $20-22 range
    2. Microsoft announces a big acquisition (Salesforce (NASD:CRM)?) by the end of the summer, so Ballmer can repair his reputation.

    Here's some of the interesting comments on the blogs and twitter:

    Henry Blodget reports that Yahoo claims it didn't realize MSFT had bumped up the offer to $33 until they received Ballmer's letter. His take: First, Microsoft walked away in part because of price and in part because Steve Ballmer lost his enthusiasm for the deal. In our opinion, this makes a future deal less likely (especially over $33). Second, Yahoo misjudged Steve Ballmer's commitment to the transaction and, as a result, blew it.

    Rafat Ali notes that big institutional investors would have pushed Yahoo to make the deal if the offer was at $34 per share -- just a dollar more than Microsoft's final offer.

    Paul Kedrosky notes "this is a red letter day for VCs, btw. not only aren't two startup acquirers turning into one, MSFT & YHOO are going to be buying like mad."

    John Blossom suggests the breakup was good for Yahoo based upon the two companies approach on IP: "While there were some important synergies that would have come out of a Microsoft deal, in general it would have been an acquisition by a company driven by old concepts of intellectual property value of a company that is starting to move far more aggressively into new concepts for realizing the value of intellectual property."

    Doug McIntyre suggests as a next step that Microsoft buy Chinese search engine Baidu (NASD:BIDU), noting that Asia is the future growth spot for Internet search and that Baidu's current market cap is $12 billion, a fraction of the $47 billion it offered for Yahoo.

    From a shareholder perspective, who's been the biggest winners and losers?
    Looking at stock price changes since the deal was announced on Jan 31 and including today's close:

    MSFT dropped from $31.91 to $29.08, a loss of nearly 9%
    YHOO has gained 29.7%, going from $18.87 to $24.47
    GOOG, meanwhile, has gone from $511 to $595, a gain of 16% by executing its plans while watching its supposed competitors implode.

    TrackBack

    TrackBack URL for this entry:
    http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/480703/28782172

    Listed below are links to weblogs that reference More Rumblings on MicroNoo:

    Comments

    Post a comment

    If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

    RSS Feed

    • Subscribe in NewsGator Online
    • Subscribe in Bloglines

    • Add to netvibes

    • Add to Google

    Subscribe to Content Matters via email


    • Enter your Email


      Powered by FeedBlitz

    Premium Content from the Alacra Store

    • Related Research from Alacrastore.com

    Made with ImageChef