Monster to pay $225 million for Yahoo's HotJobs site
The deal, which comes as the U.S. unemployment level remains around 10
percent, would take Yahoo out of the online recruitment business, leaving
Monster with only one major competitor, Careerbuilder.com.
Monster, which controls about one-third of online jobs postings in the
United States, does not expect the deal to raise significant issues with
antitrust regulators, since HotJobs has a smaller share of the market.
Careerbuilder, owned by U.S. newspaper publishers Gannett Co Inc
(GCI.N), McClatchy Co (MNI.N) and Tribune Co (TRBCQ.PK), as well as software
maker Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O), has the largest part of the online job ads
market.
It is too soon to say whether Monster will cut jobs as a result of the
deal, Chief Executive Sal Iannuzzi told Reuters.
The deal comes as the U.S. economy shows signs of recovering from a
protracted slump. The government's January jobs data due on Friday is expected
to show only the second monthly jobs gain since the recession began in 2007,
though the unemployment rate is expected to remain above the key 10 percent
level.
Monster's monthly index of online jobs demand weakened in December,
suggesting a broad recovery was not yet under way.
Under the terms of the deal, Monster will pay Yahoo $20 million to $31
million a year for Yahoo to redirect traffic to its site.
Yahoo acquired HotJobs in 2002 for roughly $445 million in cash and
stock. J.P. Morgan analyst Imran Khan said that unique users on the HotJobs
site in December declined 32 percent year over year, in a note to investors
citing data from comScore.
Yahoo's sale of HotJobs, which had been rumored for months, is the
latest example of the Internet company's reorganization under CEO Carol Bartz
who took the helm in January 2009.
Bartz has shed various assets including last month's sale of the Zimbra
email business to VMware Inc (VMW.N), and struck a deal to let Microsoft Corp
(MSFT.O) handle its site's Internet search technology, in an effort to refocus
the company on Internet media and advertising and reignite growth.
Monster also will double the number of newspapers that it works with to
about 1,000, Iannuzzi said. Monster and HotJobs each have deals with newspaper
websites for displaying online job ads.
The HotJobs deal is expected to close in the third quarter. Monster said
the deal will be accretive to earnings next year.
HotJobs generates annual revenue of about $100 million. Monster's 2009
revenue totaled $905 million.
The deal overshadowed Monster's quarterly results, also released on
Wednesday. They largely matched expectations.
Monster's net loss came to $2.1 million, or 1 cent per share, matching
forecasts. Revenue fell 27 percent to $213 million, slightly ahead of Wall
Street expectations. Deferred revenue, which Monster will recognize over a long
period, rose 15 percent sequentially to $305 million.
Monster shares were trading at $16.50 after hours, up from their closing
price of $16.42. Yahoo was up slightly from the close at $15.50.
Source:
reuters.com