COMPUTERS
August 5, 2008 2:00 PM PDT

Shareholder approval of Yahoo board plunges on vote recount

Posted by Stephen Shankland
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The shareholder approval ratings for Yahoo Chief Executive Jerry Yang and Roy Bostock plunged Tuesday after Yahoo released new results that corrected a vote transmission error.

Shareholders unhappy with board members withheld their votes in the Friday election. In Yahoo's official voting tally released Friday, 14.6 percent of votes for Yang and 20.5 percent for Bostock were withheld.

But in the corrected results, Yang's withhold percentage rose to 33.7 percent and Bostock's to 39.6 percent, Yahoo said.

Update 2:09 p.m. PDT: Quantitatively, the change means nothing: "These errors did not affect the outcome of the election of directors," Yahoo said.

But qualitatively, it's a different story, because withhold votes do send a message even if the board was still re-elected. The disapproval has dropped down to the range of last year's meeting, a few days after which former Chief Executive Terry Semel lost his job.

A transmission error by Broadridge Financial Services affected the withhold tally, lopping off any withhold votes beyond 100 million in some particular circumstances. Broadridge transmitted to Yahoo results from Capital Research Global Investors, which owns 6.2 percent of Yahoo stock at last count, and its sister group Capital World Investors, which owns 9.85 percent of Yahoo shares.

(Credit: Yahoo)

Update 2:23 p.m.: It's not hard to figure out why shareholders might be upset with the company, which is in the midst of a turnaround effort that began in 2007 and will last through 2008.

Since February, Yahoo's share price rose from $19.18 to the $30 range when Microsoft attempted to acquire first Yahoo then later just its search assets.

With those deals dead, for now at least, Yahoo's shares have sunk back down. The company's stock closed at $19.82 on Tuesday and dropped a few cents in after-hours trading.

Arthur Kern, Ronald Burkle, and Gary Wilson also saw a big jump in the percentage of votes withheld. Here's how the withhold-vote percentages changed for the various board members from Friday's tally to the Tuesday's revised results:

• Roy J. Bostock, 39.6 percent, up from 20.5 percent

• Ronald Burkle, 37.9 percent, up from 18.8 percent

• Eric Hippeau, 9.3 percent, no change

• Vyomesh Joshi, 7.1 percent, no change

• Arthur Kern, 31.7 percent, up from 22.1 percent

• Robert Kotick, 7.6 percent, no change

• Mary Agnes Wilderotter, 7.8 percent, no change

• Gary L. Wilson, 27.7 percent, up from 18.2 percent

• Jerry Yang, 33.7 percent, up from 14.6 percent.

Stephen Shankland covers Google, Yahoo, search, online advertising, portals, digital photography, and related subjects. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered servers, supercomputing, open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 8 comments
by mishmash0101 August 5, 2008 3:32 PM PDT
Yahoo's board is clueless. This company will never be worth more than $25 a share.
Reply to this comment
by Kwasiowusu August 5, 2008 5:37 PM PDT
Are you kidding me?
So Jerry Yang and his cohorts are either fraudulent, or they can't even count sharholder votes or hire someone who can count. Any of the above looks bad for Yahoo management, and makes them look even more foolish then before.
Reply to this comment
by oneoclock August 5, 2008 9:59 PM PDT
It wasn't Yahoo who didn't count properly. It was two major shareholder groups who sent the wrong numbers to Yahoo on how their clients had voted.
by someguy999 August 5, 2008 6:55 PM PDT
Another Yahoo! is a joke company point of evidence comes to see the light of day!

Icahn's probably wondering if he made the right move now knowing that right off the bat 1/3 of the people wanted to public voice that they were unhappy with Jerry, Roy and Ronald. when a 1/3 of your voters withhold their vote for their CEO... how is it possible that they can get the support they need to effectively run their business?
Reply to this comment
by benjaminstraight August 6, 2008 3:52 AM PDT
Our daily installment of Yahoo drama.
Reply to this comment
by michaelo1966 August 6, 2008 6:41 AM PDT
Easy to see how this happened; taking information from multiple sources and aggregating it together on a server is complex; there are only a few companies in the world that are great at it. Oh wait, Yahoo's one of them... Maybe next year they'll have Google run their voting infrastructure.
Reply to this comment
by Mr Bigglesworth August 6, 2008 6:48 AM PDT
LOL - I like that - good comment!
Reply to this comment
by darkr August 6, 2008 7:38 AM PDT
based on the first offical count they said that the vote was a show that they had the confidence of the shareholders. and that they stood by that count

yet here it shows that not only confidence is lower then last year
(side note a third party counts the votes not the board)
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