News

Reports: Microsoft and Yahoo Actively Negotiating Merger Deal

Shares of Microsoft closed just shy of 7 percent higher on Friday May 2 based on new speculation that Microsoft and Yahoo are now actively negotiating to seal a deal.

Both the New York Times and Wall Street Journal are reporting that the two companies are in serious negotiations, looking to break a stalemate that effectively began three months ago after Microsoft launched its unsolicited bid to acquire Yahoo. Microsoft is arguing that a combination with Yahoo would be the best bet to take on Google

According to both reports however, sources close to the talks caution that a deal may not be struck by end of day today, and the possibility remains that Microsoft could decide to walk away.

What appears to be the biggest stumbling block is the price Yahoo officials believe Microsoft should pay to buy the company.

According to sources quoted by the Wall Street Journal report, Microsoft was now willing to pay as much as $33 per Yahoo share, up from its original bid of $31 per share, but many Yahoo shareholders are looking for an offer in the $35 to $37 a share range. Considering the devaluation of Microsoft's share price since it's inital bid, some are arguing that the reported raised bid to $33 would have valued the deal as high as $35 a share at the time.

About the Author

Ed Scannell is the editor of Redmond magazine.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Hands On with GitHub Copilot App Technical Preview: Turning a Blazor Issue into a PR

    GitHub's brand-new Copilot desktop app, in technical preview, handled a small Blazor issue from planning through pull request creation, but the hands-on test also showed why developers still need to verify agent work in the running app before merging.

  • At Build 2026, Microsoft Sets Up Windows as an OS for AI Agents

    Microsoft's Build 2026 Windows developer announcements point to a broader platform strategy for agentic AI, spanning terminal workflows, local models, app-building skills, Cloud PCs and operating system-level containment.

  • Slammed by Copilot Usage-Based Billing on Day 1, Facing $180 Bill for June

    A journalist using GitHub Copilot Pro details how a broken editorial workflow on day one of usage-based billing led to runaway token consumption, a projected $180 monthly bill, and practical tactics for cutting AI credit burn.

  • AdaBoost.R2 Regression Using C#

    AdaBoost.R2 regression works by building an ensemble of decision trees, training them on reweighted data, and combining their predictions with a weighted median, while also showing how parameter choices affect accuracy and overfitting.

Subscribe on YouTube