Yahoo's board of directors plans to reject Microsoft's unsolicited
US$44.6 billion takeover bid, The Wall Street Journal reported
Saturday, citing as its source "a person familiar with the situation."

According to the report, the source said the Yahoo board has determined
that the $31-per-share offer "massively undervalues" the online services
company. In addition, Microsoft's buyout bid doesn't take into
consideration the business risks that Yahoo would be taking if it
entered into an agreement that in the end might not be approved by
government regulators, the source told the Journal.

According to the Journal, Yahoo's board intends to send Microsoft a
letter on Monday, detailing its position.

A Yahoo spokeswoman declined to comment on the report today. "We are
not providing details on the board's review process," she wrote.
"Yahoo's board is carefully and thoroughly evaluating the Microsoft
proposal in the context of all of the company's strategic alternatives,
and will pursue the best course of action to maximize long-term value
for shareholders."

Microsoft, which announced its offer for Yahoo on Feb. 1, couldn't be
reached for comment today. The offer is a combined cash-and-stock deal;
in announcing the bid, Microsoft said Yahoo shareholders could choose to
receive either cash or Microsoft stock, although it added that the total
consideration would be equally split between the two forms of payment.

Yesterday, published reports said that Yahoo's board was meeting to
discuss the offer.

Yahoo is still evaluating other options, including a search advertising
partnership with Google, according to today's report by the Journal. It
also may still be open to a longer negotiation with Microsoft: The
Journal said it was told by the source that Yahoo would be unlikely to
consider any offers below $40 per share.

If so, that would require Microsoft to raise its original offer by at
least 29 percent, or about $13 billion. In other words, the cost for
Microsoft to become a more credible rival to Google in the search and
online advertising markets could start at about $57.6 billion.

Google has been doing what it can to scuttle the Microsoft takeover
bid, including playing the antitrust card by asking, in a blog post by
one of its executives last Monday, whether Microsoft might "attempt to
exert the same sort of inappropriate and illegal influence over the
Internet that it did with the PC?"

Microsoft quickly shot back, issuing a statement saying that a
combination of it and Yahoo merger would "create a more competitive
marketplace." 

© Eric Lai contributed to this story. (Digital Arts)


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