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May 3, 2008 8:54 PM

What Steve Said to Jerry



News Brief. Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer's letter to Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang is interesting reading.

What follows is the unedited letter, as released today by Microsoft:

"Dear Jerry:

After over three months, we have reached the conclusion of the process regarding a possible combination of Microsoft and Yahoo!.

"I first want to convey my personal thanks to you, your management team, and Yahoo!'s Board of Directors for your consideration of our proposal. I appreciate the time and attention all of you have given to this matter, and I especially appreciate the time that you have invested personally. I feel that our discussions this week have been particularly useful, providing me for the first time with real clarity on what is and is not possible.

"I am disappointed that Yahoo! has not moved towards accepting our offer. I first called you with our offer on January 31 because I believed that a combination of our two companies would have created real value for our respective shareholders and would have provided consumers, publishers, and advertisers with greater innovation and choice in the marketplace. Our decision to offer a 62 percent premium at that time reflected the strength of these convictions.

"In our conversations this week, we conveyed our willingness to raise our offer to $33.00 per share, reflecting again our belief in this collective opportunity. This increase would have added approximately another $5 billion of value to your shareholders, compared to the current value of our initial offer. It also would have reflected a premium of over 70 percent compared to the price at which your stock closed on January 31. Yet it has proven insufficient, as your final position insisted on Microsoft paying yet another $5 billion or more, or at least another $4 per share above our $33.00 offer.

"Also, after giving this week's conversations further thought, it is clear to me that it is not sensible for Microsoft to take our offer directly to your shareholders. This approach would necessarily involve a protracted proxy contest and eventually an exchange offer. Our discussions with you have led us to conclude that, in the interim, you would take steps that would make Yahoo! undesirable as an acquisition for Microsoft.

"We regard with particular concern your apparent planning to respond to a "hostile" bid by pursuing a new arrangement that would involve or lead to the outsourcing to Google of key paid Internet search terms offered by Yahoo! today. In our view, such an arrangement with the dominant search provider would make an acquisition of Yahoo! undesirable to us for a number of reasons:

  • "First, it would fundamentally undermine Yahoo!'s own strategy and long-term viability by encouraging advertisers to use Google as opposed to your Panama paid search system. This would also fragment your search advertising and display advertising strategies and the ecosystem surrounding them. This would undermine the reliance on your display advertising business to fuel future growth.
  • "Given this, it would impair Yahoo's ability to retain the talented engineers working on advertising systems that are important to our interest in a combination of our companies.
  • "In addition, it would raise a host of regulatory and legal problems that no acquirer, including Microsoft, would want to inherit. Among other things, this would consolidate market share with the already-dominant paid search provider in a manner that would reduce competition and choice in the marketplace.
  • "This would also effectively enable Google to set the prices for key search terms on both their and your search platforms and, in the process, raise prices charged to advertisers on Yahoo. In addition to whatever resulting legal problems, this seems unwise from a business perspective unless in fact one simply wishes to use this as a vehicle to exit the paid search business in favor of Google.
  • "It could foreclose any chance of a combination with any other search provider that is not already relying on Google's search services.

"Accordingly, your apparent plan to pursue such an arrangement in the event of a proxy contest or exchange offer leads me to the firm decision not to pursue such a path. Instead, I hereby formally withdraw Microsoft's proposal to acquire Yahoo!. We will move forward and will continue to innovate and grow our business at Microsoft with the talented team we have in place and potentially through strategic transactions with other business partners.

"I still believe even today that our offer remains the only alternative put forward that provides your stockholders full and fair value for their shares. By failing to reach an agreement with us, you and your stockholders have left significant value on the table.

"But clearly a deal is not to be.

"Thank you again for the time we have spent together discussing this. Sincerely yours,

"Steven A. Ballmer"

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Comments (8)

I-Man :

Joe like you said, the letter was a masterpiece and simply damage control.

Either way Portuno called it way back on February 17th

http://messages.finance.yahoo.com/Stocks_%28A_to_Z%29/Stocks_M/threadview?m=tm&bn=12004&tid=1348011&mid=1348015&tof=5&rt=2&frt=1&off=1

Microsoft probably won't offer more for Yahoo because they really don't want to own Yahoo. I think we'll see Microsoft abruptly shift gears and settle with VCSY. That will (Ballmer hopes - I don't know if Wade will provide one) bring a license for 744/521 to Microsoft and MSFT's applications and platform inventory can then be made internet-powered and Yahoo will be washed away unless they've been working with evaluation versions of 744/521 all this time.

As long as Microsoft does not settle, they will not be able to use any development work that uses 744/521 claims. When Microsoft settles, the agreement will probably allow MSFT to begin using whatever 744/521 related development they have in the shadows to be used immediately.

So the risk Microsoft is taking is that 744/521 are in the hands of the Googles and Yahoos of the world for evaluation and they've been using that to develope their systems and one day they will be allowed by VCSY to begin using the patents for commercial work before Microsoft gets that chance.

Either way, Microsoft will likely let the Yahoo bid fail so they can claim they're being abused then settle with VCSY and miraculously derive some incredible internet-enabled applications.

Ballmer would then look like a genius (even though he would show clearly he's a crook) and the softees in the world will elect him to be CEO for the next twenty years.

Oh well, who cares. It's only money.

Ralph :

The "POWER OF BALLMER" .

Marco :

The Fox And the Grapes (Aesop)
It was a very hot and sunny afternoon. A fox, which had been hunting the whole day, was very thirsty.
"How I wish there was some water," the fox thought to himself.

Just then, he saw bunches of fat and juicy grapes hanging from a vine above his head. The grapes looked ripe and ready to burst with juice.

"Oh, my! Oh, my!" the fox said as his mouth began to water. "Sweet grape juice, quench my thirst!"
The fox stood on tiptoe and stretched as high as he could, but the grapes were out of his reach.
Not about to give up, the fox walked back a short distance and took a running leap at the grapes. Again, he could not reach the grapes.
The fox jumped and leapt, again and again, but each time he could not reach the grapes. Until, at last, the fox was tired and thirstier than ever.
"What a fool I am!" said the fox furiously. "These grapes are sour and not fit for eating. Why would I want them anyway?"
With that, the fox walked away.
Moral: Some people disdain and underestimate what they cannot have.
----------
no comment.

karl :

Jerry borrowed from Reagan and Trotsky in his response. His exact phrase was: "... freedom and democracy will leave Microsoft on the ash heap of history."

JM :

Again with the I-Man junk spam penny stock! I don't CARE about VCSY or what it is! This is not a VCSY forum!

Its obvious that its not important because I have not heard about this company anywhere else but here through I-Man spammer. All you have to do is do some basic research and see that this company is financially worthless. Come on now!

portuno :

@ JM

This IS a forum for discussin what impacts Microsoft. I think you're going to be surprised to find just how much Microsoft has been impacted.

If you had watched Microsoft more closely, perhaps you could give us some actual reasons why VCSY is not important to Microsoft.

But, just saying "nothing" doesn't cut it.

Without settling with Eolas, there would be no Silverlight. Now, they need a web-application platform attached to Silverlight and they haven't been able to show it. There another small piece missing from Microsoft.

It really is that simple.

chips :

@ Marco:
The Fox And the Grapes (Aesop)
----------------------------------------------------
You were of course right on the mark with that one.

Ballmer should have bucked up and paid the $37 a share, or just give up and turned MS into a holding company. Because, for once, Steve Ballmer was right that internet advertising is a good future for MS. The only problems with the advertising future for M$ is;

1. Google and Yahoo beat them to it.
2. Nobody except the shills, wants MS to control the internet, or even advertising.
3. MS cannot make MSN/Live work or stop losing share, so what would it do to Yahoo, except make it lose more?
4. MS wasted money on expensive data centers, that it now will not have a use for with internet advertising share.
5. Vista is not helping in any of this.
6. At some point the EU will become involved in MS attempt to control the internet.

Marco :

chips:"MS into a holding company."
Good vision of the future

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