Levinsohn leaving Yahoo after second CEO snub
By AP
31st July 2012 01:52 PM
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Ross Levinsohn, Yahoo Executive Vice President of Americas, speaks at the Web. 2.0 Summit in San Francisco. (AP)
LOS ANGELES: Ross Levinsohn, the interim CEO who was snubbed in the search for
a permanent leader at Yahoo, is leaving the Internet portal.
Yahoo announced the departure in a securities filing on Monday.
With much fanfare, Yahoo appointed 37-year-old Marissa Mayer as CEO two weeks
ago. Retaining Levinsohn, who had been interim CEO since May, would have been
one of her first big triumphs.
Levinsohn's exit is not unexpected. Yahoo's stock barely moved in after-hours
trading. Following the announcement, it rose 2 cents to $16. The stock closed
Monday's regular session down 13 cents, or less than 1 percent, at $15.98. In
the last year, Yahoo's stock has traded between $11.09 and $16.79.
Levinsohn, 48, had been head of Yahoo's global media business and had pushed
the company to enter into exclusive partnerships with the likes of CNBC and Tom
Hanks to create original content.
But Levinsohn was passed over twice by the company's board in favor of other
top executives, including Scott Thompson, who resigned in May over
discrepancies on his resume after just four months on the job.
The appointment of Mayer, a former Google top executive who oversaw its email,
mapping and news services, suggests the company intends to focus more on the
functionality of its products rather than on the media content which was
Levinsohn's domain.
Analyst Sameet Sinha with B. Riley & Co., said Levinsohn's exit doesn't indicate
a big shift in strategy, although a turnaround plan under Mayer is still
unclear.
"This was an issue of retaining an executive who was CEO," Sinha
said. "To say they will be focused more on products and less on content
would be foolish. It's their bread and butter."
Levinsohn leaves Yahoo with a hefty severance package. As part of the
agreement, he was granted 67,000 shares of restricted Yahoo stock and the
option to buy another 250,000 shares at $15.80 apiece. Both benefits were
immediately available to Levinsohn.
He also received a lump sum equal to his salary and bonus of about $1.5 million
along with health premiums and faster vesting of stock options he had accrued
already. Levinsohn's compensation package was valued at $12 million last year.
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