Verizon Communications Inc. yesterday announced an agreement to buy Yahoo Inc. for $4.83 billion.

The deal will end months of uncertainty about Yahoo’s future after the company announced plans to review strategic alternatives in February.

Bloomberg was the first to report that the $4.8 billion deal would be announced yesterday.

Reuters reported on Friday that Verizon had emerged as the front-runner in the Yahoo auction.

The transaction would boost Verizon’s AOL internet business, which the company acquired last year for $4.4 billion, by giving it access toYahoo’s advertising technology tools, as well as other assets such as search, mail, messenger and real estate.

It would also mark the end of Yahoo as an operating company, leaving it only as the owner of a 35.5 per cent stake in Yahoo Japan, as well as its 15 per cent interest in Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.

Started in 1994 by Stanford graduate students Jerry Yang and David Filo, Yahoo in its early years was the destination of choice for many making their first forays on to the World Wide Web.

By 2008, Yahoo was fending off a contentious takeover bid from Microsoft Corp and struggling to define its mission.

That question was never really answered, leading to years of management instability and shifting priorities.

In December, Yahoo scrapped plans to spin off its Alibaba stake after investors fretted over whether that transaction could have been carried out on a tax-free basis.

It instead decided to explore a sale of its core assets, spurred on by activist hedge fund Starboard Value LP.

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