Former AOL Chief Jonathan Miller is looking in the couch cushions to raise enough money to buy a part--if not all of Yahoo.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Miller has been talking to private equity folks and sovereign wealth funds to buy Yahoo for about $20 to $22 a share. Miller would have to raise about $28 billion to $30 billion.
This report has trial balloon written all over it. And the Journal notes that Miller would have trouble raising the dough.
However, going private would probably be a good idea. Yahoo could restructure, revamp and not worry about making quarters. Seagate went private in the last bust and them returned after restructuring.
There are a number of questions hanging around:
That final question is the big one for me. The private equity playbook looks like this: Buy a company, lever it up with debt and pay shareholders big dividends. Exhibit A: Chrysler. Exhibit B: Linens & Things. Exhibit C: Sharper Image. Exhibit D: Tribune. Not to tar all private equity, but the recent track record isn't great. Would Yahoo be acquired by visionaries or folks who want to strip it?
Also see: Icahn averages down on Yahoo; Searches for break even
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