Well that was before I knew that Yahoo’s annual meeting is July 3.
Before then, say, by Memorial Day, we should know just what Yang can pull off.
Probably, not much. I think he’s still self-delusional about Yahoo’s value.
For instance, after he inched Yahoo’s stance down to $37 a share, he says he expected Ballmer to counteroffer. But, as the story notes, Yahoo hadn’t hit $33, let alone $37, in more than two years.
“The company is doing better than three months ago,” Yang said Monday. “I think in many ways this (takeover threat) has been good for us. We still have a lot of work to do to demonstrate that we can be successful, and I am focused on that.”
But Yang’s credibility has been undermined by Yahoo's repeated forecasts of better times ahead while its profits steadily eroded during the past two years.
“We are not willing to give (Yahoo) the benefit of the doubt that they can make meaningful improvement over the next three years,” UBS analysts Benjamin Schachter, Heather Bellini and Abhey Lamba wrote in a joint research note.
Well, Yang and Yahoo don’t have three years.
Beyond that, two pension funds have already sued Yahoo, and are amending their suits in light of Ballmer’s higher offer being rejected.
I give Yang no more than a 50-50 chance of surviving the July 3 meeting.
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