Verizon buys Yahoo for $4.83 billion; CEO Marissa Mayer says she isn't leaving - LA Times
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Verizon buys Yahoo for $4.83 billion; CEO Marissa Mayer says she isn't leaving

It’s all but over for Yahoo Inc.

The Sunnyvale, Calif., Internet company, once a key guide to the World Wide Web, announced Monday that telecommunications giant Verizon Communications Inc. will buy its core assets for $4.83 billion.

The sale comes after a five-month bidding process that saw interest from media groups such as the Daily Mail and IAC, Internet companies such as Google and Microsoft and private equity firms TPG and Bain Capital.

Verizon, the nation’s largest wireless carrier, was the clear front-runner, having snapped up the remains of AOL last year for $4.4 billion to expand its digital portfolio.

The deal — under which Yahoo will part with its email service; its websites dedicated to news, finance and sports; advertising tools; real estate; and some patents  —  is expected to close in the first quarter of 2017. The company will continue to operate independently until then.

The sale does not include the company’s cash, its shares in Alibaba Group Holdings, its shares in Yahoo Japan or its non-core patents (called the Excalibur portfolio). These assets are to remain with Yahoo, and the company will change its name and be a registered, publicly traded investment company once the deal is closed.

Yahoo’s websites are to be integrated with AOL, but AOL spokeswoman Caroline Campbell confirmed that “Yahoo brands [such as Yahoo Finance and Yahoo Sports] will not go away.” Instead, they will exist alongside AOL’s standalone brands such as the Huffington Post, TechCrunch and Engadget.

The final sale is a far cry from the $45 billion Microsoft offered in 2008 — an offer Yahoo famously rebuked. But Yahoo’s brand has taken a beating in recent years, with some analysts saying that the company should be happy to fetch anywhere near $5 billion.

Yahoo’s former interim chief executive, Ross Levinsohn, was even less optimistic, telling CNBC last week that he expected the company to trade in the $3.5-billion to $4-billion range.

“The state [of Yahoo] is troubled, clearly,” Levinsohn said. “We can look back over the past four years and say the strategy did not pay off.”

The deal had been expected to end the four-year tenure of Yahoo Chief Executive Marissa Mayer, but she said early Monday that she expects to stay with the company. 

"I love Yahoo, and I believe in all of you," Mayer said in a statement. "It’s important to me to see Yahoo into its next chapter."

Verizon has the means to make an acquisition this large, and analysts have said Yahoo would complement the mobile and broadband company as it continues to bolster its media efforts.

Yahoo properties such as Yahoo Finance and its online lifestyle magazines could be a valuable addition to the telecom company's portfolio, expanding its audience and reach and opening additional revenue opportunities as its pool of new potential mobile and broadband customers dwindles.

Like AOL, Yahoo boasts a sizable and sophisticated digital advertising business, which Verizon could use to develop new revenue streams.

Times staff writer Samantha Masunaga contributed to this report.

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UPDATES:

7:35 a.m.: This article was updated throughout with Times staff reporting. 

6:30 a.m.: This article was updated to add background information. 

6:20 a.m.: This article was updated to add that Yahoo CEO Marissa Mayer intends to stay with the company. 

This article was originally published at 4:15 a.m.

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