Quizzes by Quibblo.com

I put up this poll on my blog Sunday and a number of other blogs picked it up or linked to it. The net result was about 1,800 responses as of 6am Eastern this morning. You can track the responses (and the number of them) at this poll result page.

The wisdom of the crowd is the closing price today will be $22. I took the percent of vote at each price level and then multiplied them out to get that expected value. Here's the distribution of votes:

The look of this chart tells me that I should have let people vote for some lower prices and that $16 vote was chosen by a number of people who would have voted for lower prices. That would have brought down the expected price, but not by much.

So if my poll is correct, YHOO will be down almost 25% today and I suspect the biggest drop will be in the morning. That's $8bn of market cap lost.

As most of you know, I think Yahoo! made the right choice by walking away from Microsoft's bid. I think it was a wakeup call and they can and will deal with much of what ails them.

Yahoo! had about $2bn of EBITDA in 2007 before you add stock based comp charges. At $32bn ($22/share), Yahoo! will trade at 16x EBITDA and that's not including the impact of their cash, their Yahoo! Japan stake, and their Alibaba stake which together add up to $14bn of value or $10/share. If you back that out, Yahoo!'s a bargain at $22/share.

So if it gets there today, I'll be buying some. I still think it ends the day at $26/share, which was my vote that kicked off the poll.

Fred Wilson

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This article has 3 comments! Add yours below...

This article has 3 comments:

  • John G
    May 05 08:49 AM
    You say that "At $32bn ($22/share), Yahoo! will trade at 16x EBITDA and that's not including the impact of their cash, their Yahoo! Japan stake, and their Alibaba stake which together add up to $14bn of value or $10/share." But in fact all of their asssets, including cash, Japan, and Alibaba ARE included in the earning figures from 2007? This stock traded at 19 before the bid, why would it trade for more now?
  • rich168
    May 05 08:51 AM
    $21
  • blueskyrocket
    May 05 09:33 AM
    The price depends on whether or not you believe MS HAS walked away. I for one believe they will be back. Ballmer wants the shareholders to see their value evaporate before their eyes. Then step back in. Ballmer will want to be seen as being able to deliver Yahoo to MS shareholders, if he can do that at a cheaper price, that will appease calls for Ballmer to be replaced.
    Either way, I'm here to read all about it.

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