Y&R and B&B still do pretty well at CBS. And as long as a) Julie Chen remains married to Les Moonves, and/or b) Les remains president of CBS, The Talk will likely be around for awhile. If that one ever goes away, there's a chance, since CBS had considered Pyramid.
Another scenario: if NBC ever decides to free up one of the 17 hours of the Today show, or gets rid of Days of Our Lives, there might be a shot, if they don't give the hour(s) back to the affiliates. In the case of NBC and ABC, I think they're both doing what they can to keep their only soaps. I really don't think either wants to be the first network to completely wipe them off the daytime schedule, but when it comes down to money, I'm sure that's a small price to pay for either.
At this point, I'd say you're better off looking at primetime or syndication. In the last 10 years, it's kinda felt like primetime is the new daytime with all the games that have popped up since 1999. And like daytime in the 70s and 80s, some shows lasted and became iconic and even spawned syndicated counterparts (Millionaire, Weakest Link, Deal or No Deal), while others fizzled after a few weeks (Winning Lines, Show Me the Money).