Updated from 10:06 a.m. EST:
Speculation swirled around Wall Street Wednesday about the fate of Internet giant Yahoo! (YHOO Quote - Cramer on YHOO - Stock Picks) after the company backed out of an appearance at an Internet conference and trading in its shares was halted. The company said it would issue a postclose press release and hold a 5:15 p.m. conference call, though it declined to specify the subject. The possibility that Yahoo! might be a buyer or seller in a major transaction has been a staple of the Internet-deal rumor mill for years, co-starring a host of big media and Internet companies running from Disney (DIS Quote - Cramer on DIS - Stock Picks) to eBay (EBAY Quote - Cramer on EBAY - Stock Picks). Also on traders' radar screens was the notion that Yahoo! could warn of an earnings shortfall, as the Net ad market has been notoriously weak and big newspaper publishers have begun warning of weakening results for February.Shareholders Have Rights, Too
Fueling takeover speculation last week was Yahoo!'s adoption of a shareholder rights plan, which the company said was designed to deter "coercive takeover tactics," such as accumulation of shares in the open market, and to prevent someone from acquiring control of Yahoo! without paying a premium. Idle pundits have long wondered if and when Yahoo! might hook up with a major media company, even before fellow Internet denizen America Online announced the deal to create AOL Time Warner (AOL Quote - Cramer on AOL - Stock Picks) in January 2001. Yahoo! executives, however, have never confessed to any urgency to ally themselves with a single old-media firm. And while the idea of marrying new media and old media has a felicitous ring to it, the money-pit adventures of Disney and GE (GE Quote - Cramer on GE - Stock Picks) affiliate NBC Internet (NBCI Quote - Cramer on NBCI - Stock Picks) show that such marriages can quickly sour. Yahoo!'s shares, though still pricey by some measures -- the company has a forward price-to-earnings ratio in the neighborhood of 60 -- look like a bargain compared to where they've been. The stock, which was trading at $20.50 Wednesday morning, closed as high as $237.50 in January 2000.| Downer Yahoo! back at fall 1998 levels |
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