
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer uses a giant pen to sign the 10-year deal, alongside Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz, on Wednesday at Yahoo's headquarters in Sunnyvale, Calif.
(Credit: Yahoo/Microsoft )
After months of
fits and starts, Microsoft and Yahoo have announced a 10-year search deal that will see the two companies
join forces to take on Google.
"In simple terms, Microsoft will now power Yahoo search while Yahoo will
become the exclusive worldwide relationship sales force for both companies'
premium search advertisers," the companies said in a joint statement. The deal
is expected to go into effect in 2010 and improve Yahoo's profitability, though
not its revenue, the companies said.
Less expansive than the all-out,
US$44 billion acquisition Microsoft proposed last year--and even than some of the search partnerships
once discussed--the deal does allow the companies to share resources and combine
their engineering efforts. Even together, however, the two companies have only
about 30 percent of the search market compared to Google, which has more than
twice that amount.
"This agreement gives us the scale and resources to create the future of
search," Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said in a statement. "Success in search
requires both innovation and scale. With our new Bing search platform, we've
created breakthrough innovation and features. This agreement with Yahoo will
provide the scale we need to deliver even more rapid advances in relevancy and
usefulness."
Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz, meanwhile, said the move will help Yahoo focus on other areas, also adding that the deal
has the full support of the company's board (lest anyone wonder what Carl Icahn
thinks about the more limited deal).
"This is a significant opportunity for us," Bartz said. "Microsoft is an
industry innovator in search and it is a great opportunity for us to focus our
investments in other areas critical to our future."
The dollar valueAs for the financial terms, there is not the large
upfront payment once discussed. However, Microsoft will offer both revenue
guarantees to Yahoo as well as the lion's share of the search-advertising
revenue generated on Yahoo's site.
That apparently wasn't enough to satisfy investors. In trading before the
market opened, Yahoo's stock dropped more than 7 percent, or US$1.28, to US$15.94.
Microsoft rose 1 percent, or 24 cents, to US$23.71.
Yahoo will get 88 percent of search revenue created by its sites during the
first five years, while Microsoft will guarantee a certain level of search
revenue for 18 months in each country. The companies expect it will take about
two years after the deal is approved to fully get the partnership up and
running.
Once fully in place, Yahoo said it expects the deal will boost its annual
operating income by about US$500 million, while reducing capital expenditure by
US$200 million and increasing operating cashflow by about US$275 million per year.
Microsoft will be able to incorporate Yahoo's search technology, including
its Panama ad-selling tool, but the companies will use Microsoft's AdCenter
sales tool and Bing search engine to power both
sites.
Aiming to head off privacy concerns, the two companies noted that "the
agreement protects consumer privacy by limiting the data shared between the
companies to the minimum necessary to operate and improve the combined search
platform, and restricts the use of search data shared between the companies".
The deal must still pass regulatory muster and the two companies anticipate
it will take several months to finalize. "Microsoft and Yahoo expect the
agreement to be closely reviewed by the industry and government regulators, and
welcome questions," the companies said. "The companies are hopeful that closing
can occur in early 2010."
Microsoft and Yahoo are joining forces in search, but in a line clearly aimed
at regulators, the companies take pains to note that their collaboration is
limited to that arena.
"The agreement does not cover each company's Web properties and products,
email, instant messaging, display advertising, or any other aspect of the
companies' businesses," they said. "In those areas, the companies will continue
to compete vigorously."
Via
CNET News
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