Information Technology News
Internet moguls in deals, mergers speculation | Internet moguls in deals, mergers speculation |
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| by Stan Beer | |
| Wednesday, 24 May 2006 | |
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The past few weeks have witnessed increasing speculation about deals, mergers and acquisitions involving many of the biggest names and most trafficked sites in the internet space. Early on, it was rumours of Microsoft buying Yahoo or just Yahoo's search business. Now that one has been put to bed by Yahoo CEO Terry Semel, fresh speculation has emerged about both a merger and a massive search deal. The first rumour that appears to be doing the rounds among analysts is that online trading portal eBay may be in line for some sort of alliance with Yahoo. Whether that be a deal or a partnership agreement, it makes more sense for Yahoo than becoming part of Microsoft. Both sites have equally high profile brands and businesses that are complementary and synergistic. Yahoo and eBay are the two leading marketplaces on the net. Yahoo, the most visited site on the web, is the leading marketplace of news and information content, as well as having the leading web-based email product. EBay, ranked number 9 in internet traffic, is the leading marketplace for products, and also owns Skype and PayPal, themselves very strong online brands with strong user bases. In the instant messaging and internet telephony area, the fast growing Skype, which has more than 100 million users and growing fast would instantly propel Yahoo into the major league of online voice and messaging communications, nicely complementing its strength in email. For eBay, a merger with Yahoo would greatly reduce, if not entirely eliminate its dependence on Google referrals as a source of traffic. Such an alliance would indeed result in a formidable online presence. So far, however, it's all just speculation and analyst musings.
The other big deal that looks like it could very easily go down sooner
rather than later is a search engine deal between News Corp's social
networking site MySpace and one of the major search engines. MySpace,
which has more than 80 million registered users and growing fast, is a
veritable magnet for young internet goers. |
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