Yahoo chief executive Marissa Mayer may not need to suffer any more unwelcome headlines after it was reported that two leading company shareholders have approached rival AOL over a possible merger.
The report, if true, highlights the ongoing battle Mayer has on her hands as she seeks to restore the fortunes of Yahoo.
The report that “two top ten” Yahoo shareholders are so unhappy with Mayer’s reign that they have approached a rival in the form of AOL was revealed by Reuters, which quoted unnamed Yahoo investors as its source, as well as two sources close to AOL.
The shareholders reportedly made a direct plea to AOL CEO Tim Armstrong to explore a merger and run the combined company.
Yahoo currently has a market value of $47bn (£29.6bn), but its Alibaba stake alone is worth $44bn (£27.6bn).
AOL boss Armstrong was reportedly receptive to the Yahoo shareholders and acknowledged the potential benefits of a deal. However, there is no official talks between the two companies and Armstrong would reportedly only consider a friendly merger.
There was no official comment from either AOL or Yahoo.
Former Google executive Mayer has been in charge of Yahoo since July 2012, after previous CEO Scott Thompson was fired over including a non-existent computer science degree in his CV and regulatory findings.
Mayer inherited a company in bad shape, and over the next couple of years began a turnaround plan for the company, which led to the departure of a number of executives. Some of her decisions, including her personally reviewing every new hire after the candidate has been vetted by a team of colleagues, have been widely pinged by industry experts. Mayer also banned Yahoo staff members from working from home.
Under her reign growth has remained elusive, but Mayer has managed to triple the value of Yahoo stock, but critics believe this was down mostly to its valuable 24 percent stake in Alibaba.
Mayer has sought to boost Yahoo’s growth with a number of acquisition deals. This includes the purchase of mobile analytics startup Flurry in July to strengthen its position in the mobile advertising business. Earlier in the year, it also acquired mobile messaging start-up Blink to build out its mobile engineering workforce.
It has also previously purchased location-based advertising start-up Admovate, address book management application developer Xobni, automated video editing app developer Qwiki, and language recognition start-up SkyPhrase.
But her most significant acquisition was that of blogging platform Tumblr, which was bought for $1.1 billion (£725m) in May 2013.
And this acquisition spree shows no sign of slowing as it was confirmed that Yahoo is acquiring BrightRoll, which offers a programmatic video advertising platform.
Yahoo said the acquisition will accelerate its strategy, which is focused on search, communications, and digital content through growth in mobile, social, native, and video advertising. “BrightRoll will dramatically strengthen Yahoo’s video advertising platform, making it the largest in the US,” the company said.
“Video, along with mobile, social, and native, is driving a surge in digital advertising,” said Mayer. “Here at Yahoo, video is one of the largest growth opportunities, and BrightRoll is a terrific, strategic and financially compelling fit for our video advertising business.”
“As with every acquisition, we have been extremely thoughtful about our approach to the video advertising space,” she added. “This acquisition will accelerate the growth of both companies – we can help BrightRoll scale to even more advertisers globally and they can bring their tremendous platform offering to Yahoo’s advertisers. The combination builds positive momentum for Yahoo’s broader display advertising business in 2015.”
How well do you know the world of Yahoo? Take our quiz.
Troubled battery maker Northvolt reportedly considers Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the United States as…
Microsoft's cloud business practices are reportedly facing a potential anti-competitive investigation by the FTC
Ilya Lichtenstein sentenced to five years in prison for hacking into a virtual currency exchange…
Target for Elon Musk's lawsuit, hate speech watchdog CCDH, announces its decision to quit X…
Antitrust penalty. European Commission fines Meta a hefty €798m ($843m) for tying Facebook Marketplace to…
Elon Musk continues to provoke the ire of various leaders around the world with his…