Yahoo renominates board
By Eric Auchard
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Yahoo (YHOO.O) on Thursday nominated nine of its 10 existing directors for reelection to the company's board, setting the stage for a showdown with dissident investors at its annual shareholder meeting.
In a regulatory filing, the embattled Internet media company postponed its annual meeting from July 3 until later the same month and disclosed two independent investor proposals challenging its executive pay and human rights record.
The company said several shareholders other than billionaire investor Carl Icahn plan to nominate candidates to its board. Yahoo did not identify these new faces and whether they represented a serious alternative slate.
A week ago, financier Carl Icahn launched a campaign to replace Yahoo's board with new directors that would reopen buyout talks with Microsoft (MSFT.O), saying the board had acted "irrationally" in refusing the software giant's bid. He has amassed 10 million Yahoo shares and options to buy another 49 million, according to a recent securities filing.
Microsoft walked away from its sweetened $47.5 billion (24 billion pounds) offer for Yahoo earlier this month. The company had initiated an unsolicited bid originally worth around $44.6 billion at the end of January, which Yahoo rejected as insufficient.
In the past week, Microsoft and Yahoo said they were in talks on an alternative deal, but provided no terms. A source familiar with those talks said discussions then involved a plan for Microsoft to buy Yahoo's search business and take a stake in Yahoo, once Yahoo has spun off its Asian assets.
Yahoo said it did not believe that electing the Icahn slate of directors was in investors' best interests and that the other shareholders seeking election to the board had not complied with company bylaws and therefore were ineligible.
REPEAT PERFORMANCE Continued...
Can I have one for Christmas?
The hottest toy in the U.S. this Christmas is an interactive hamster. It does not come from one of the major toy brands or from a movie but a small, seven-year-old company from Missouri. Full Coverage

UK
US