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Yahoo! is toast (Page 2)
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Originally Posted by ctt1wbw
What I mean is that you can't hold Google in your hand, or go into a Google store and see it, like you can hold an Apple in your hands or go in to a Home Depot. I'm driving a Jeep, you can own stock in DiamlerChrysler, or whatever it's called now. I just bought lots of stuff from Home Depot, which you can own stock in, and see the store and talk to the employees. I did a Google search for "bikini babes" and got some pics. So what? Google is so overhyped and overvalued, it's PATHETIC. As of now it's $595 per share. Per share of what? Something that's online only? Please.
Why does having an office that customers are supposed to walk into increase the value of a business? Providing a service is a perfectly valid business strategy.
You don't walk into a movie or TV studio any more than you walk into Google's offices, and you don't normally own what they produce any more than you own what Google produces (search results, maps, etc.). And those actually produce more of a concrete product than most service-oriented businesses (e.g. consulting firms, repairmen).
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Originally Posted by ctt1wbw
What I mean is that you can't hold Google in your hand, or go into a Google store and see it, like you can hold an Apple in your hands or go in to a Home Depot. I'm driving a Jeep, you can own stock in DiamlerChrysler, or whatever it's called now. I just bought lots of stuff from Home Depot, which you can own stock in, and see the store and talk to the employees. I did a Google search for "bikini babes" and got some pics. So what? Google is so overhyped and overvalued, it's PATHETIC. As of now it's $595 per share. Per share of what? Something that's online only? Please.
Google is not an Internet search company. Google is an advertising company.
And Google dominates the lucrative online syndicated advertising market. That's what justifies its ridiculous share price.
(Last edited by BasketofPuppies : May 5, 2008 at 04:08 PM
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Originally Posted by ctt1wbw
What I mean is that you can't hold Google in your hand, or go into a Google store and see it, like you can hold an Apple in your hands or go in to a Home Depot. I'm driving a Jeep, you can own stock in DiamlerChrysler, or whatever it's called now. I just bought lots of stuff from Home Depot, which you can own stock in, and see the store and talk to the employees. I did a Google search for "bikini babes" and got some pics. So what? Google is so overhyped and overvalued, it's PATHETIC. As of now it's $595 per share. Per share of what? Something that's online only? Please.
Are you serious ?
-t
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Yeah, some people need to get off the internet. Obviously only physical technology has any worth. 
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Originally Posted by ctt1wbw
What I mean is that you can't hold Google in your hand, or go into a Google store and see it, like you can hold an Apple in your hands or go in to a Home Depot. I'm driving a Jeep, you can own stock in DiamlerChrysler, or whatever it's called now. I just bought lots of stuff from Home Depot, which you can own stock in, and see the store and talk to the employees. I did a Google search for "bikini babes" and got some pics. So what? Google is so overhyped and overvalued, it's PATHETIC. As of now it's $595 per share. Per share of what? Something that's online only? Please.
Our economy has changed from a manufacturing to a service economy a long time ago. Just as an FYI.
I earn 100% of my money supplying services, in my case strategy and marketing services, to my clients. We don't produce anything, we don't have any manufacturing locations, we don't have stores. Yet we still run a business.
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Originally Posted by ajprice
So, basically Yahoo! tried to "negotiate" at too high a price, and MS wouldn't bite and said FU.
IOW, as we suspected, Yahoo! was just holding out for more cash, and really wasn't bargaining for the integrity of its business.
I suspect that MS may still be interested though, although MS would have been in a better bargaining position had YHOO dropped more than 15%. (It didn't drop more probably because some still believe an MS-Yahoo! deal may still eventually come.)
I betcha MS does come back to the table. All eyes will be on MS now... to see what offer they come back with (assuming they do come back). They could sweeten it slightly, but not by much.
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I really hope that guy is an athiest.
Edit: The guy who wants to be able to physically hold a company's product/service.
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Originally Posted by Dakar the Fourth
I really hope that guy is an athiest.
Edit: The guy who wants to be able to physically hold a company's product/service.
Uh oh. Poliwart forum, here we come...
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Crap. Alright, I promise to say no more on that.
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Originally Posted by Eug
So, basically Yahoo! tried to "negotiate" at too high a price, and MS wouldn't bite and said FU.
...
IOW, as we suspected, Yahoo! was just holding out for more cash, and really wasn't bargaining for the integrity of its business.
Conversely, they may have been trying to avoid the old "Microsoft buys you, incorporates only the bits they think they can cash in on fast, and then dumps the rest" practice Mr. Balmer's group is famous for. I'm not a big user of most of what Yahoo! provides, but their email and news amalgamation features are pretty useful to me. I'd hate to have MS just cherry-pick the advertising functions of Yahoo! and then shut down everything else-it wouldn't be unimaginable for them to do that.
Originally Posted by Eug
I suspect that MS may still be interested though, although MS would have been in a better bargaining position had YHOO dropped more than 15%. (It didn't drop more probably because some still believe an MS-Yahoo! deal may still eventually come.)
I betcha MS does come back to the table. All eyes will be on MS now... to see what offer they come back with (assuming they do come back). They could sweeten it slightly, but not by much.
Yahoo! may not be the enormous giant MS is, but they have something MS wants, and that gives them some leverage. My (fantasy world) thought would be that the Yahoo! brass wants to find a way to work WITH MS rather than FOR them, and I think that would be a better idea in the long run for both, than for MS to wholly own everything that is Yahoo! and then apply their historically bad business sense when it comes to newly purchased companies.
This should stay interesting for a while...
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Originally Posted by ghporter
Conversely, they may have been trying to avoid the old "Microsoft buys you, incorporates only the bits they think they can cash in on fast, and then dumps the rest" practice Mr. Balmer's group is famous for. I'm not a big user of most of what Yahoo! provides, but their email and news amalgamation features are pretty useful to me. I'd hate to have MS just cherry-pick the advertising functions of Yahoo! and then shut down everything else-it wouldn't be unimaginable for them to do that.
Nah. He just wants to sell.
Chief Executive Officer Jerry Yang, criticized by some investors for rejecting Microsoft Corp.'s $47.5 billion takeover bid, said he'll consider selling to the software company or another bidder for the right price.
Furthermore, Yang's Google partnership idea is basically an admission that Yahoo! can't compete... in the long term.
A partnership with Google could boost sales and profit. Handing over a small percentage of search results to Google may add up to $200 million a year in earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization, Stifel Nicolaus & Co. analyst George Askew said yesterday in a research note.
By giving up control of some of its search advertising, Yang would put one of the most valuable parts of the company at risk, Haverty said.
``He will have essentially surrendered the crown jewel of the company to Google, which is beating his brains in anyway,'' Haverty said. ``They get short-term gain for long-term punishment.''
Yahoo! may not be the enormous giant MS is, but they have something MS wants, and that gives them some leverage. My (fantasy world) thought would be that the Yahoo! brass wants to find a way to work WITH MS rather than FOR them, and I think that would be a better idea in the long run for both, than for MS to wholly own everything that is Yahoo! and then apply their historically bad business sense when it comes to newly purchased companies.
This should stay interesting for a while...
If you hadn't guessed yet, I agree with this guy:
Microsoft-Yahoo (YHOO): Has Microsoft (MSFT) Really Walked Away? - Silicon Alley Insider
It doesn't seem inconceivable that, over the next few days, Yahoo shareholders will effectively insist that negotiations be re-opened--in which case, Microsoft will have "gone hostile" without going hostile, just by walking away. And if negotiations are reopened as a result of shareholder unrest, of course, the advantage will have shifted overwhelmingly to Microsoft.
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P.S. I see that a fair number on the YHOO forums shorted the stock... after it had already dropped ~20%. WTF? "Brave" souls I must say. Too bad their shorts failed miserably, as YHOO is now back over 25 bux.
(Last edited by Eug : May 6, 2008 at 09:04 AM
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Originally Posted by Dakar the Fourth
I really hope that guy is an athiest.
Edit: The guy who wants to be able to physically hold a company's product/service.
And that has WHAT to with anything? And no, I'm not an athiest. I know where I'm going in 70 years. 
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#1 shareholder pissed off
On the latter front, Yang, Bostock and Yahoo's board came under blistering attack from the firm's largest shareholder: Gordon Crawford of Capital Research Global Investors, whose parent firm owns 16% of Tech Ticker's parent.
"I am extremely angry at Jerry Yang and at the so-called independent board," Crawford told The New York Times.
#2 shareholder pissed off
"Had there been a full deal on the table, a hostile deal, at $34 or $35, we would have had to take a look at it," Legg Mason's Bill Miller told The New York Times.
Legg Mason owns about 7% of Yahoo's stock and is the second-largest institutional shareholder, behind Capital Research & Management.
Yahoo backpeddles, says $33 offer wasn't in writing
Monday was a rough day for Yahoo, with shares plunging 15% in the wake of the weekend collapse of merger talks with Microsoft. Yahoo’s President, Sue Decker, sat down with me in San Francisco and recounted her version of events during the 3-month takeover battle. She reiterated what looks to be a key Yahoo theme: Jerry Yang & Co. never received written confirmation of Microsoft’s $33 raised bid.
This is an echo of comments made by Yahoo sources over the weekend (including those to the Wall Street Journal and CNBC). In addition, when I asked Decker which shareholders support the Board’s decision to hold firm at $37, she referred back to the original formal bid: "The work our Board did was to go around and talk to shareholders at the price Microsoft offered in writing, which was $31 a share."
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Originally Posted by ctt1wbw
I did a Google search for "bikini babes" and got some pics. So what?
Have a teacher explain the term "advertising revenue" to you for an answer to the "So what?" part of that post.
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You don't like gals in swimsuits?

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Speaking of the PL... 
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Can I once again point out the "shareholders only after the easiest, quickest profit" angle? Just because it looks like it applies here. (Present company excepted, of course.)
Instead of going public and berating Yang, why aren't these shareholders getting together and saying "we want this thing to happen with these conditions:..."? It's their right and responsibility as owners of big chunks of stock...
I STILL think that when Microsoft buys anything they muck it up badly and quickly. Sure, there are a few exceptions of course but their track record of "buying a whole hardware store for the plumbing tools section then pitching the rest in the dumpster" is there for all to see. Predatory business isn't pretty, and it doesn't produce equity, just short term profits that can't be depended on to last through the next quarter.
But you're probably very right about this Eug, and I'm sad because of it.
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Originally Posted by Eug
You don't like gals in swimsuits?
I can see her ankles. What a whore.
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