Verizon buys Yahoo for $4.48 billion

Published Jun 16, 2017

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Washington - Verizon closed its $4.48 billion purchase of Yahoo's core

business, finalizing a deal mired by two massive hacks affecting more

than 1 billion Yahoo accounts and marking the latest play by telecoms to

challenge Silicon Valley's dominance in online

advertising.

Under a newly bolstered Verizon, Yahoo and AOL will combine

as part of a new media and technology company called Oath. The sale of Yahoo

was first announced last summer, with a $4.8 billion price tag. But just months

later, the company disclosed a series of data breaches that compromised the

personal information of potentially hundreds of millions of people. Following

the breaches, Yahoo and Verizon eventually agreed to discount the purchase

price by $350 million.

As part of the finalized deal, Yahoo chief executive Marissa

Mayer will resign with a "golden parachute" worth just over $23

million, in cash, equity and benefits, according to an SEC filing. She served

at the company's helm since 2012.

Read also:  Yahoo! To change name, shrink board 

And more than 2 000 employees will get laid off as Yahoo and

AOL reorganize under Verizon's management, according to a person familiar with

the matter.

Once the portal to the internet and a pillar of the

technology industry, Yahoo has fallen in stature as other web giants, chiefly

Google and Facebook, have built sprawling business empires and amassed cultural

cachet extending well beyond Southern California.

While no longer seen as the pioneering Internet company it

once was, Yahoo's umbrella of websites, which includes Yahoo Finance and Yahoo

Sports, commands a staggering amount of online traffic.

Yahoo's Internet properties had nearly 200 million unique

visitors in April, according to the analytics firm comScore. Only Facebook and

Google claimed more. Experts said it's this massive audience that attracted

Verizon to Yahoo.

"Verizon stands to expand their audiences

significantly," said Susan Bidel, a senior analyst at Forrester Research.

Bidel said that Verizon is positioning Oath as a platform for advertisers that

connects them with large audiences and provides targeted information about the

kinds of people they are reaching.

Verizon's purchase of Yahoo also continues its play for

original online media. Through its $4.4 billion acquisition of AOL in 2015,

Verizon owns the Huffington Post and TechCrunch.

Folding in Yahoo's sites both expands the reach Verizon can

offer advertisers and amplifies the company's ability to tailor ads to specific

users.

Like AT&T's bid to purchase Time Warner, Verizon's move

also reflects a trend in the telecom industry for companies to wed their

networking technology to exclusive content.

"They want to have greater ownership to avoid the

ultimate fear of being commodities, of being this dumb pipe," said Walt

Piecyk, a telecom analyst at BTIG. Armed with unique data about the browsing behaviour

of internet users, companies like Verizon and AT&T can also use that

information to shape the formats of websites and videos, and serve more

effective, pinpointed ads, he said.

Tim Armstrong, the former chief executive of AOL will now

lead Oath. "Now that the deal is closed, we are excited to set our focus

on being the best company for consumer media, and the best partner to our

advertising, content and publisher partners," he said.

WASHINGTON POST 

 

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