Nothing personal, but that's the kind of shareholder that ruins good businesses. The language of Ballmer's letter is clearly intended to cause precisely that kind of action from Yahoo! shareholders.
The shareholders sue the management, the management spends its time defending itself from lawsuits rather than leading innovation and increasing stockholder value, department projects go awry and more employees leave, and the stock drops. Microsoft makes the same kind of offer a few years later, but at an even lower price. The new management, seeing what happened to their predecessors, will take the offer, and Microsoft gets all of Yahoo!'s assets at a bargain price.
It's absolute short-sightedness on the part of stockholders. Surely the mere fact that Microsoft was willing to buy the company at a 70% premium indicates that the stock was undervalued to begin with, and that people with the tech & business knowledge to see the big picture (not just the Microsoft execs, the Yahoo! execs too) knew the value of the company could be increased.
Even if the management at Yahoo! can defend itself from these lawsuits, they'll have been put on the defensive, on every front. No major initiatives, no bold new plans, no big mergers or acquisitions that could actually help the company; if they rock the boat a second time so soon again, they won't avoid being tossed out. So while they stay the course set by the backseat drivers who don't even have a full view of the road, Microsoft is free to out-compete.
>"Nothing personal, but that's the kind of shareholder that ruins good businesses. The language of Ballmer's letter is clearly intended to cause precisely that kind of action from Yahoo! shareholders."
Perhaps you are right. But shareholders rarely hold stock to build good businesses they are there to make money. They would happily invest in a bad company if it was about to be bought out for a huge premium. Once you go public, few things matter other than the numbers.
Plus 72% of Yahoo shareholders are professional money managers, arbitrageurs, and regular investors. These people are likely to want this deal to go through.
I cannot think of a better advertisement for staying small and profitable. Why work so hard for financial and creative indepenence, and then have money-hungry shareholders take that away for their own motives?
It's not only bad VCs that can do this, apparently bad
shareholders can too.
They should have dumped their stock when the offer was first floated (and stocks reached about the same premium MS was offering). Yahoo's management never said it would accept that first offer and all shareholders who "lost" money are those who expected a reversal of the initial positions ("we won't pay a penny more" and "we will not sell at this price").
Things like these happens all the time.
And I would not rule out an evil plan where all MS intended was to keep Yahoo's management buried in zillions of frivolous lawsuits (that would have to prove Yahoo's management somehow knew this offer was in Yahoo's shareholders' best interest and resisted despite of that)
IIRC, MS was buying back stock. By making this offer they got a nice discount.
I beg your pardon? It absolutely is their responsibility as shareholders to do that _if they want the best price for their shares_. Example: Tonight after the markets close, I offer $35 a share for Microsoft, in cash, conditional on obtaining 51% of the company.
The market thinks about this, and MSFT's price when the markets open tomorrow morning reflects their guess as to whether I will get 51% of the company or not, whether Ballmer will have me killed^H^H^H^H^H^H tied up in litigation to prevent me buying the company and firing him, whether Yahoo will raise some money from Google to buy MSFT as a white knight, whatever.
The point is, the market price when a company is "in play" reflects a bunch of people making wild-assed guesses about the possible outcomes and the relative likelihood of each outcome.
If you are strictly in it for the money, it's your responsibility to make your own guess. If you guess is higher than the market value, you hang on to the stock. If your guess is less than the market value, you sell.
Lawyers will do anything, but IMHO, the only time you sue management is if they make a promise they do not deliver.
But what if Ballmer stands up and says, "Do not sell to Reg for $35, we are $28 today but I am going to buy Yahoo and our stock will be worth substantially more than $35 as a result of the transaction." I don't get my 51%, and then Ballmer doesn't buy yahoo. Now shareholders should sue, they hung on to their stock because of what Ballmer promised.
Consider what happens if MSFT's stock trades at $33 and Ballmer blocks me from buying MSFT in court, then the stock drops back to $28. I can see a lawsuit. But what really happened? Shareholders culd have had a sure $33 in cash by calling or emailing their broker and saying "sell."
They _chose_ to hang on. Why? because they gambled on getting $35 if I got 51% of the stock? or hoping for $40 if I had to raise my bid? That's their gamble, why should Ballmer be on the hook for their wagering?
Hanging on to your stock because you guess that the stock will be worth more is entirely your problem. Hanging on to your stock because management make vague promises about the long term value of the stock is also your problem. You certainly can't sue the week after the offer.
Yes, Yahoo management will probably end up defending themselves.
But Yahoo management has a legal obligation to do what's best for the company's shareholders. Unless they've got a silver bullet that will double YHOO's market cap soon, their performance on this front seems to be below average.
The shareholders sue the management, the management spends its time defending itself from lawsuits rather than leading innovation and increasing stockholder value, department projects go awry and more employees leave, and the stock drops. Microsoft makes the same kind of offer a few years later, but at an even lower price. The new management, seeing what happened to their predecessors, will take the offer, and Microsoft gets all of Yahoo!'s assets at a bargain price.
It's absolute short-sightedness on the part of stockholders. Surely the mere fact that Microsoft was willing to buy the company at a 70% premium indicates that the stock was undervalued to begin with, and that people with the tech & business knowledge to see the big picture (not just the Microsoft execs, the Yahoo! execs too) knew the value of the company could be increased.
Even if the management at Yahoo! can defend itself from these lawsuits, they'll have been put on the defensive, on every front. No major initiatives, no bold new plans, no big mergers or acquisitions that could actually help the company; if they rock the boat a second time so soon again, they won't avoid being tossed out. So while they stay the course set by the backseat drivers who don't even have a full view of the road, Microsoft is free to out-compete.