Yahoo! and Aol – Heaven and Hell

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A deal with Aol would be great for the stock but bad for the company.

  • The Aol and Yahoo! story is heating up again (see here) as Starboard has gone back into Aol and now has a reasonable stake in both companies.
  • There is substantial value to be released in both companies and while putting them together would give a one-time release of value, it would do nothing for the long term outlook for either company.
  • The main issues here are that Yahoo! is trading at a substantial discount to the sum of its assets and that its core business continues to underperform.
  • The activists want Yahoo! to realise the value in its Asian assets, cut costs and return cash to shareholders thereby releasing substantial value for shareholders.
  • Such a release of value would most likely result in a one-time substantial rally in the stock but little else.
  • They are also pushing Aol and Yahoo! to get together in the belief that they can solve each other’s problems.
  • Unfortunately this approach ignores the fact that Yahoo!’s only real chance of seeing real growth again lies in the development of its ecosystem.
  • Over the last 2 years it has accumulated a series of Digital Life assets that together give it over 70% coverage of the Digital Life Pie.
  • While it has been great at accumulating these assets it has done almost nothing with them.
  • These assets need to be integrated and rolled out on mobile in a fun and easy to use way where users can identify with Yahoo!
  • That way users would want to spend time with Yahoo! which Yahoo! can then use to sell valuable, targeted advertising.
  • Unfortunately, none of this has happened which is the main reason why the core business has been a bad underperformer this year.
  • Getting together with Aol does nothing to fix this problem and in every likelihood would make it worse.
  • This is due to the added complexity of adding in Aol’s assets on top of the jumble that is already there at Yahoo!.
  • Furthermore, other than the potential to release value for shareholders, this combination does nothing for Yahoo!’s ecosystem strategy and nothing to get growth going again.
  • This is why I suspect that the management of Yahoo! will resist this deal but the sale of its Asian assets would go a long way to mollifying investors.
  • I continue to be frustrated by Yahoo!’s lack of progress and think that until there an improvement in the company’s ability to execute, its core business will continue to underperform.
  • I am taking Alibaba-related profits on Yahoo! as there is no sign of a turnaround and I do not expect it to sell its Asian assets.
  • I could be looking for a re-entry point in 2015E but I need to see some signs of progress first.  

 

RICHARD WINDSOR

Richard is founder, owner of research company, Radio Free Mobile. He has 16 years of experience working in sell side equity research. During his 11 year tenure at Nomura Securities, he focused on the equity coverage of the Global Technology sector.