Report rubbishes latest Microsoft-Yahoo rumour
A Sunday Times report that Microsoft is looking to buy Yahoo's search business for $20 billion has been called "total fiction."

It's the story that just won't die. The Sunday Times has today claimed Microsoft is looking to buy the Yahoo's search business for $20 billion (13 billion), but the rumour has already been called "total fiction" by an influential blog.
The Sunday Times, which did not cite its sources, said the proposal under discussion involves a complex transaction that would see the US software giant support a new management team to take control of Yahoo.
The team would be led by ex-AOL Chairman and CEO Jonathan Miller and former Fox Interactive Media President Ross Levinsohn, the report said.
But the AllThingsDigital blog, affiliated with the Wall Street Journal, quoted Levinsohn as saying the report was "total fiction." Top sources at Yahoo and Microsoft also scoffed at the report, the blog said.
Yahoo spokesman Brad Williams said: "We don't comment on rumours, and all this is a rumour."
A Microsoft spokeswoman declined to comment.
Microsoft withdrew its $47.5 billion buyout offer for Yahoo in May after Yahoo chief executive Jerry Yang and his board rejected the bid as too low.
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Bid speculation was sparked again earlier this month when Yang announced he was stepping down. Microsoft chief exec Steve Ballmer ruled a bid out at the time, but said he was "open" to talks on a deal for Yahoo's search business.
Activist investor Carl Icahn - who sits on Yahoo's board and increased his stake in the company to 5.4 per cent last week - reiterated he favoured the sale of the search business, according to an interview in the 1 December edition of Barron's.
"Microsoft has said publicly that they are not interested in buying the whole company, and I believe them. But they are interested in doing a deal on search, and we should pursue that," Icahn was quoted by Barron's.
Earlier this year, Icahn threatened to launch a proxy fight against Yahoo and oust Yang in an effort to push the company to accept Microsoft's offer. He later struck a deal with Yahoo and joined its board.
Icahn began amassing Yahoo shares during the company's merger talks with Microsoft.
The Sunday Times said senior directors at Microsoft and Yahoo are understood to have agreed on the broad terms of the deal, but there is no guarantee it will succeed.
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