Jerry Yang's Blunder - Worst Business Decision Ever?
This week, Carl Icahn doubled down on Yahoo, adding 6.8 million shares (at $9.88 per share) to go with the 69 million he bought earlier at $25/share. Some see this as a positive sign, but increasing his stake by 10% (and net investment by 4%) seems a very weak endorsement of the company‘s future. Others speculate that he wants to influence the choice of top Yahoo to replace soon-to-be-former CEO Jerry Yang, the man who turned down Microsoft’s $31/share offer.
Earlier this week, Merc columnist Mike Cassidy wondered whether Yang’s blunder counted as the “worst business decision ever.” I might have voted for worst decision of the year, but ever?
Cassidy got an earful from his readers, who suggested a range of other mistakes:
- Big Three automakers: for killing the EV1, making gas guzzlers “nobody wanted to buy”, and taking their private jets to beg for a bailout. Comment: Not even close.
- Xerox PARC for fumbling the future. Comment: Top 25 but not top 5.
- WebVan and the other dot-com fools. Comment: I was tempted to list these in the top 5, but then many of the founders dumped their soon-to-be-worthless shares on greater fools and now live in Atherton or Saratoga — so who made the mistake here?
I’ve got some other nominees. How about all those banks loading up on subprime loans? The decision of GM and Ford a decade ago to plough their cash back into their declining businesses, rather than buy out their (ultimately more profitable) competitors? Railroads passing up the chance to buy airlines 90 years ago?
One guaranteed top 5 pick:
IBM handing control of the PC industry over to Intel and Microsoft in 1980 (a bigger mistake by at least an order of magnitude than Yang’s). Another (as recounted by Al Chandler):
RCA aggressively licensing its color TV patents to obscure, struggling overseas electronics makers; the bottom line was nicely padded by royalty income, until Sony, Panasonic, Toshiba and others drove RCA out of business.
It’s hard to see how a Yahoo acquisition that never happened could touch some of the biggest value-destroying acquisitions of all time. Cassidy’s readers mentioned
Time Warner buying AOL; as with WebVan, it was dumb for the buyer but not for the seller. While this probably destroyed the most market cap, in terms of consequences I’d put
Sprint buying Nextel ahead of Time Warner’s mistake: Time Warner may survive but it’s not clear that Sprint will. (And while we’re on cellular, various firms like PacTel and MCI unloading cellular franchises in the 1980s would also have to qualify as top 25 blunders). Then there’s
MCI buying WorldCom, certainly a purchase that had irreversible consequences.
There’s plenty of material here for teaching undergrads and MBAs. But even if every business student learns these lessons, foolish optimism or unbounded greed will cause some to make ever-greater mistakes down the road.
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This article has 17 comments:
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jeffge
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5 Comments
Nov 30 08:57 AM-
adam mcmillan
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1 Comment
Nov 30 09:31 AM-
jgalt41
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1 Comment
Nov 30 11:59 AM-
bc818
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11 Comments
Nov 30 12:02 PM-
marketwatchr
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35 Comments
Nov 30 12:41 PM-
Sanibel
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30 Comments
Nov 30 01:43 PM-
hoo2
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1 Comment
Nov 30 01:48 PMOn Nov 30 12:41 PM marketwatchr wrote:
> It is in the top 3 for sure...... but, the auto makers and UAW are
> about to move ahead of Yang.
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Pareto
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1 Comment
Nov 30 04:36 PMare you sure that BenQ purchsed Ericsson's mobile phone business?
In fact it was Siemens' mobile phone business BenQ got from Siemens $700 M to take over (the "buyer" gets here money from the seller). This was a smart deal. Please make some research about that.
Two weeks ago the German company Solarworld offered GM to take over their German branch Opel provided GM pays them $ 1,3 B fee. The seller pays money to the buyer to get rid of the shit.
" I would add an Asian top ten with BenQ's purchase of Ericcson's mobile phone business."
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Dividends Anonymous
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63 Comments
My Website
Nov 30 04:48 PM-
gpt
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1 Comment
Nov 30 11:00 PMFact: WorldCom grew largely by acquiring other telecommunications companies, most notably MCI Communications.
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Alex Filonov
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330 Comments
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Dec 01 12:29 AMBy the way, in 1999-2000 there was a lot of talk that Yahoo! market cap cannot possibly be higher than that of GM and Ford combined. It's still higher, and for a good reason.
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tonymosa
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1 Comment
Dec 01 01:53 AM-
GSlusher
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25 Comments
Dec 01 03:55 AM-
tziv
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9 Comments
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Dec 01 08:47 AM-
JHG
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1 Comment
Dec 01 12:00 PM-
Kinabalu
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148 Comments
Dec 01 12:11 PM-
paul
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41 Comments
Dec 01 05:11 PM