main
Report a problem

Shareholders Back Yahoo Board

Sagittarius   on 03 August 2008 - 22:35 · 3 comments & 2237 views

Advertisement (Why?)
What could have been a nasty Yahoo shareholder uprising if activist billionaire shareholder Carl Icahn had been present actually turned out to be a rather docile gathering of business folks at the company's annual conference here at the Fairmont Hotel Aug. 1. Icahn, who owns about $1 billion worth of Yahoo stock—almost 5 percent of the company—and who tried to orchestrate a Microsoft takeover over a six-month period, met with key executives two weeks ago, agreed on a temporary settlement and decided not to attend the meeting, to the disappointment of many shareholders who see him as their de facto leader.

Embattled Yahoo CEO and co-founder Jerry Yang and board chairman Roy Bostock both retained their positions in the Yahoo hierarchy—and, surprisingly, by much larger mandates than in the 2007 vote. After enduring a 34 percent "no" vote last year, Bostock received only a 20.5 "withholding support" vote this time, while only 14.6 percent of shareholders withheld their support for Yang, who scored 30 percent "against" in 2007. Longtime board member Arthur Kern had the harshest vote on Friday with 22 percent against him. More than 75 percent of the company's 1,381,008,701 outstanding shares were represented at the meeting, either in person or online.

View: Full Story at eWeek

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 3 additional comments
(1 reply) #1 thealexweb on 04 Aug 2008 - 00:21
This isn't the result most would have expected.
#1.1 HalcyonX12 on 04 Aug 2008 - 04:36
Maybe something unexpected will happen, who knows what the settlement was.
#2 A Clockwork Lime on 04 Aug 2008 - 06:31
Why is this unexpected? Just because one whiney little bitch of an asshat buys 5% of the company just so he can dismantle it for profit, that doesn't make his opinion or decisions meaningful in any measureable way.

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)