Yahoo execs’ big pay day from a Microsoft deal
By Michal Lev-Ram
The Microhoo deal is still far from over, but you can bet every one of Yahoo’s 14,300 employees are wondering what the $44.6 billion bid from Microsoft means for them.
The fate of Yahoo’s top executives — co-founders Jerry Yang and David Filo and president Susan Decker — remains unclear. Will Microsoft clean house or try to retain some of Yahoo’s (YHOO) higher-ups? More importantly, will top Yahoos even want a corner office in Redmond?
Whatever happens under a new regime, Yang, Filo and Decker will be provided for financially, to say the least. Based on Microsoft’s (MSFT) bid to buy Yahoo at $31 a share (a 62 percent premium to the share price when the offer was made last Friday), here’s how the three head Yahoos would fare, according to executive compensation research firm Equilar and Securities and Exchange Commission filings:
- Jerry Yang: Yahoo’s CEO indirectly owns 43,489,864 shares held in trust and 9,314,390 held in a family partnership of Yahoo. If these shares were purchased for $31, they would have a combined value of over $1.6 billion. This value doesn’t include the 6,310 shares held by Yang’s wife, for which he disclaims beneficial ownership.
- David Filo: Filo stays out of the limelight but directly owns close to 80,000,000 shares of Yahoo. At the proposed $31 price per share, they would be worth more than $2.4 billion.
- Susan Decker: Decker holds an estimated 634,676 shares directly and 6,161,667 options. Under Microsoft’s valuation, they’d have a value of over $54 million.
But don’t expect any “golden parachutes” for these Yahoos — according to research firm Equilar and company records, there’s no evidence Yahoo would give its execs cash severance benefits in the event of a take-over. However, the company does have an agreement with Decker stating that some of her previously vested options will remain exercisable for an additional three years if she leaves the company.
As for majority of Yahoo’s employees — the non-billionaires — it’s not clear how they would fare under a Microsoft acquisition. The struggling search engine (and I mean Yahoo) had already said it would lay off 1,000, or 7 percent, of its workforce sometime this month. It’s likely Microsoft would make more cuts should the deal go through.
- Nintendo Wii officially recession-proof
- Kosmix searches for a new way around Google
- Report: Former AOL chief wants to buy Yahoo
- Phone forecast calls for sales decline in 2009
- Hewlett-Packard solid, Corning shattered
- The Xbox 360’s holiday makeover
- Yahoo CEO Jerry Yang to step down
- Mark Cuban faces insider trading charges
- Silicon Valley celebrates do-gooders
- Microsoft gives Windows Live a Facebook facelift
- I just went through a nightmare with ... More
- In 1998, somewhere around there, my n... More
- Bob, I'm sure someone in your office ... More
- Guess I'll join the chorus; without a... More
- dudes..really nice discussion going o... More
- I'm so glad that we we are working to... More
- But the PS3 has better graphics, crap... More
- people just wanna forget about d bad ... More
- This link will take you to a "memo" t... More
- Dude ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;... More



