20 April 2024

Yelp Is Exploring a Sale

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The website that collects consumer reviews of everything from dentists to night clubs is exploring a sale, according to people familiar with the matter. The San Francisco-based company is working with investment bankers and has been in touch with potential buyers in recent weeks, some of the people said. With a market capitalization of $2.9 billion, the company could fetch more than $3.5 billion in a sale. A deal isn’t imminent and it’s possible Yelp will decide against a sale.

Yelp launched its initial public offering in 2012, pricing above expectations, but the company has been trading down from highs in March 2014 when shares were trading around $97. On Thursday, before The Wall Street Journal’s report, Yelp’s shares were trading around $39. After the news, shares were trading around $41, up about 8%.

Yelp hosts millions of amateur reviews of shops, restaurants and other businesses, giving the brand a foothold in the local side of e-commerce that many web companies covet. Revenue comes from businesses that pay to raise their profile with enhanced pages and advertising.

Yelp drew about 143 million unique visitors a month to its website in the first quarter, according to the company’s latest financial results. While traffic was up 8% from a year earlier, growth has slowed to the reviews site, which in the first quarter of last year reported a 30% increase in traffic. Executives last week said the company would stop detailing its total visitors and instead would focus on separate tallies of desktop and mobile users.

Higher spending on Yelp’s international sales force has so far failed to reverse the slowdown in the number of people visiting the site.

Even as it struggles with growth, Yelp could be attractive to a wide range of buyers beyond online review rivals. A deep base of reviews can be a valuable asset because they take time to amass. Reviews are magnets for smartphone users, valuable for companies seeking mobile growth. Also, a website with a loyal following entices more users to visit the site directly, allowing its owner to avoid paying for search engine advertising.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal.

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