Verizon Communications to bid for Yahoo

An advertisement for Verizon is seen at Times Square in New York, in this file photo taken May 12, 2015. Verizon Communications Inc's wireline employees kicked off a strike on Wednesday after failing to reach an agreement with management on a new labor contract.  REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/Files

 

Bloomberg

Verizon Communications Inc. is the leading suitor for Yahoo! Inc. after a number of bidders decided not to make an offer for the struggling Web company, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Time Inc., Alphabet Inc. and IAC/InterActiveCorp have dropped out, while Advent International is among the buyout firms looking at making a bid, the Journal reported, citing unidentified people familiar with the matter.
Bloomberg News has previously reported that AT&T Inc., Comcast Corp. and Microsoft Corp. decided against offers.
Verizon and its AOL Inc. unit are working with at least three financial advisers on a Yahoo bid that would include its stake in Yahoo Japan Corp., Bloomberg News reported earlier.
Verizon, which has a market value of more than $200 billion, could give the stake in the Japan affiliate to its shareholders or sell it, one of the people said. The phone company would replace Yahoo Chief Executive Officer Marissa Mayer with Tim Armstrong and Marni Walden, who would run a combined Yahoo and AOL, according to two people.
Yahoo — a pioneer of the Internet in the 1990s — said earlier this year that it would explore strategic alternatives, including selling its main Internet operations, after scrapping a longtime plan to spin off assets including its stake in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.
The company’s stock has declined about 20 percent in the past 12 months as it faces growing investor scrutiny amid questions about Mayer’s leadership and ability to fuel healthy sales growth.
Ahead of Monday’s deadline for preliminary bids, only a small handful of firms moved ahead with offers, the Journal reported. Private equity funds Bain and TPG are still planning to make a run at the business while KKR expressed interest, according to the newspaper. Daily Mail & General Trust Plc is still in talks with PE firms to become partners on the bid, the paper said.

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