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Posts Tagged ‘rival yahoo’

Google Cedes Search Share to Yahoo, Bing Stays Flat

Google totaled 65.4 percent of U.S. searches, down from 65.8 percent, comScore said. Yahoo rose to 17.4 percent from 17.1 percent in July. Microsoft Bing hovered around 11 percent. – Google retained its 65 percent market share for the month
of August, though rival Yahoo nibble a bit at the search leader’s market share,
according to comScore.
Google tallied
65.4 percent of U.S. searches, down from
65.8 percent. Yahoo, which lost search share for most of 2009 before
stabili…


Microsoft Bing Grabs Search Share from Google, Yahoo

Microsoft in January nabbed 11.3 percent of the searches in the United States, grabbing market share from market leader Google and sinking search rival Yahoo. comScore claimed Google notched 65.4 percent of U.S. searches, down from 65.7 percent through December 2009. Yahoo claimed an even 17 percent of the market, down from its 17.3 percent share from December. Each month that Yahoo slides in search places greater importance on the company’s deal to let Bing power its search results on the back end. In this arrangement, Microsoft will take ownership of Yahoo’s search and boost Bing’s search share to 28 percent of the market.

Microsoft recorded 11.3 percent of the searches in the
United States for January, grabbing market share from market leader Google and sinking
search rival Yahoo, according to comScore.
Google notched 65.4 percent of U.S. searches,
down from an all-time high of 65.7 percent through …


Microsoft, Yahoo Near Web Search Deal

SEATTLE — Microsoft Corp. appears to have finally locked up rival Yahoo Inc. in a long-awaited Internet search partnership aimed at narrowing Google Inc.’s commanding lead in the most lucrative piece of the online advertising market.

Th…

Microsoft on verge of Yahoo search deal

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Microsoft Corp. appears to have finally locked up rival Yahoo Inc. in a long-awaited Internet search partnership aimed at narrowing Google Inc.’s commanding lead in the most lucrative piece of the online advertising market.
The details of the Microsoft-Yahoo alliance are expected to be announced Wednesday, according to The Wall Street Journal [...]

Microsoft and Yahoo deal rumoured

After almost 18 months of increasingly bitter negotiations, Microsoft is said to be closing in on a deal to buy technology rival Yahoo’s web search business.

Several reports emerged late on Thursday suggesting that late-stage talks were under way between the two companies, opening up the distinct possibility that Microsoft could finally take control of Yahoo’s search engine division.

An analyst with institutional investor ThinkEquity was quoted by investment website 24/7 Wall Street as saying a deal was “imminent”, while sources told influential Silicon Valley blog All Things Digital that an agreement was close to being completed.

It is not clear what the precise terms of the deal on offer are, but according to 24/7 Wall Street, it could see Microsoft shell out around $3bn (£1.8bn) to take over Yahoo’s search advertising operation. The deal, it suggests, would also see Microsoft agree to share revenue from the search business with Yahoo for several years.

Such a pact would bring to an end the tortured negotiations between the two companies, but it would be an incredible climbdown for Yahoo – which turned down the possibility of far more money when Microsoft launched an unsolicited $45bn bid to buy Yahoo in its entirety last February.

That offer was largely seen as an attempt by Microsoft to gain control of its rival’s search business, since the Seattle software giant has been desperate to increase its share of the lucrative search advertising market for several years. But Yahoo rejected it, saying that it believed it was worth far more money.

In the interim, relations between the two companies have been cool – and both sides have rejected rumours of reported negotiations.

However, with the two companies’ chief rival, Google, appearing not only increasingly powerful but also apparently immune to the worst effects of the recession, things could be changing once again. Microsoft’s attempt to claw back market share with its relaunched search engine – now called Bing – has failed to make immediate inroads, leaving the Windows giant still looking for a way to make its mark in the industry.

Taking control of Yahoo’s search business would give Microsoft almost 30% of the American market, more than trebling its sphere of influence.

According to figures from ComScore, Google controls around 65% of the search market in the US, with Yahoo 19.5% and Microsoft trailing in third with a little over 8%. Internationally, Google is even stronger.

Such a deal would be a further hammer blow to the reputation of Yahoo co-founder Jerry Yang, who led the charge against Microsoft and sparked a war of words with rival CEO Steve Ballmer.

Since the negotiations between the two collapsed late last year, however, Yahoo has brought in a new CEO, Carol Bartz – who may take a more pragmatic view of the situation given Yahoo’s financial struggles.

The company is due to release its latest quarterly results next week, and may be hoping that any agreement with Microsoft could take the edge off a disappointing fiscal period.

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