Activist investors including Starboard Value demanded and then pressured for change
Yahoo Inc's years-long fight to survive as a standalone company has drawn to a close, internal sources said on Monday.
Verizon Communications Inc will announce plans to buy Yahoo's core assets for a bit more than $4.8 billion, said two people with direct knowledge of the situation who asked not to be identified.
The deal includes Yahoo real estate assets, while some intellectual property is to be sold separately, the people said.
Yahoo will be left with its stakes in Alibaba Group Holding Ltd and Yahoo Japan Corp, with a combined market value of about $40 billion.
A transaction stands to finally seal the fate of web pioneer Yahoo after months of speculation and pressure from investors including Starboard Value LP.
The deal will add the company and its millions of daily users to Verizon's growing stable of media properties and is also likely to end the reign of Yahoo Chief Executive Officer Marissa Mayer, who tried and failed to re-invent Yahoo as an independent company.
Verizon spokesman Bob Varettoni and Yahoo spokeswoman Rebecca Neufeld declined to comment. Yahoo hasn't laid out plans for its investments in Alibaba and Yahoo Japan.
With its core wireless business maturing, Verizon is expected to keep Yahoo mostly intact to compete with Alphabet Inc's Google and Facebook Inc in digital ads by tapping into users on sites like Yahoo Finance.
The takeover will double the size of Verizon's digital advertising, placing it as a distant third behind Google and Facebook in the $187 billion market.
"The deal speaks to a clear strategy shift at Verizon," said Craig Moffett, an analyst with MoffettNathanson. "They are trying to monetize wireless in an entirely new way. Instead of charging customers for traffic, they are turning to charging advertisers for eyeballs."
AT&T Inc and Quicken Loans Inc founder Dan Gilbert, as well as firms Vector Capital Management and TPG, were also active in bidding for Yahoo.
The deal comes about two years after Starboard began campaigning for changes at Yahoo. In September 2014, it pushed Mayer, who was a little over two years into leading a turnaround, to merge with AOL Inc. She didn't oblige. In February, facing continued pressure, the company said it was considering a sale.
In some ways, a takeover of Yahoo by Verizon would finally give Starboard what it wanted because the telecom giant acquired AOL last year. Back then, Starboard saw combining the two flailing web portals as a way to cut $1 billion in costs.
AOL's advertising technology, which has improved under CEO Tim Armstrong, can now better leverage Yahoo's "reasonably strong" content for mobile devices, Moffett said.
"Verizon is hoping that combining Yahoo's content with AOL's ad technology platform and Verizon's own insights into user data can make the advertising inventory much more valuable," he said.
The activist crusade may also cost Mayer her job. Her arrival was met with fanfare when she was lured away from Google in 2012.
A failed attempt to spin off the company's Alibaba stake, now worth about $32 billion, hurt Mayer's standing with investors. The plan was scuttled to avoid a potentially large tax burden.
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