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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Business
Ethan Baron

Yahoo's $4.5 billion sale to Verizon to close Tuesday

SUNNYVALE, Calif. _ Nearly a year and a half after Yahoo put itself up for sale, the troubled company's shareholders on Thursday voted to approve its $4.48 billion sale to telecommunications giant Verizon.

The vote capped months of speculation over whether the deal would go ahead, as scandal after scandal rocked Yahoo.

Yahoo expects the sale to close Tuesday, the firm said after a special meeting dedicated to the vote on the sale and "golden parachute" compensation for senior executives.

"Yahoo stockholders voted to approve the advisory vote on the compensation payable to the company's named executive officers in connection with the completion of the sale transaction," Yahoo said in a statement.

The firm had announced in February it was for sale and accepted a $4.83 bid from Verizon about five months later.

But a series of revelations about massive hacks of Yahoo users' data, news that the company knew about one of them but kept quiet about it for almost two years, and at least two dozen hack-related lawsuits threw the deal into jeopardy. Ultimately, Verizon leveraged Yahoo's missteps into a $350 million discount on the sale price.

Layoffs are anticipated during consolidation of Yahoo with Verizon, with media reports based on anonymous sources suggesting job losses of 1,000 to 1,500.

Golden parachute compensation for Yahoo senior executives approved Thursday adds up to $23 million for CEO Marissa Mayer; $9 million for chief financial officer Ken Goldman; $15.7 million for chief revenue officer Lisa Utzschneider; and $67,000 for David Filo, co-founder and "Chief Yahoo."

According to a regulatory filing submitted by Yahoo, once the sale closes, Yahoo will become an investment company called Altaba, responsible for managing the remaining assets, which are holdings in Yahoo Japan and Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, plus a patent portfolio.

Yahoo as a brand will be preserved within Verizon, merged with Verizon's AOL into a company called Oath.

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