| NEW YORK - Time Warner Inc.'s new CEO Jeff
Bewkes laid out his vision for changes at the media conglomerate
Wednesday, including dividing AOL's online access and advertising
businesses and possibly spinning off the rest of the company's
cable division.
Investors have looked to Bewkes, who took over in January from
Richard Pearson, to dramatically restructure the company in hopes
of reviving shares that have slumped 29 percent over the past
12 months.
Investors liked what they heard. Shares rose 66 cents, or 4.3
percent, to $16.03 in midday trading.
Bewkes was speaking with analysts about the company's fourth-quarter
earnings, which fell 41 percent following a big gain last year
from the sale of AOL's European online access business.
Without the year-ago gains and other one-time effects, adjusted
profits rose 17 percent on stronger results for cable TV and movies.
Time Warner said it expected that growth to slow this year to
a range of 7 percent to 9 percent.
Time Warner owns 84 percent of Time Warner Cable and may now
have more options for spinning off the division tax free. However
it's not clear that a complete spinoff will happen, particularly
given a recent sell-off that has hurt the value of all cable stocks.
Bewkes said the company was working to separate AOL's growing
online advertising-based business from the dial-up access business,
which is in rapid decline as people shift to high-speed Internet
service from cable TV and phone companies.
That could make AOL more attractive to potential bidders. However,
those prospects became murkier last week when Microsoft Corp.
made an unsolicited bid for Yahoo Inc. That would not only eliminate
two likely bidders for AOL, but create a major online advertising
power.
Google Inc. owns 5 percent of AOL and has a right to trigger
an IPO of its stake in July. Google paid $1 billion in late 2005,
valuing all of AOL at $20 billion. AOL's value today is far less
certain.
A spinoff or sale of AOL, should it occur, would mark a sea change
from 2000, when Time Warner agreed to be purchased by the Internet
company then known as America Online at the top of the dot-com
bubble. The deal turned out to be disastrous, leading to massive
write-downs and settlements with shareholders and regulators over
accounting improprieties.
Time Warner's cable division is the largest part of Time Warner,
where many of the other assets are focused on video entertainment,
including Warner Bros., New Line Cinema and a group of cable networks
including HBO, CNN and TBS. Time Warner also owns Time Inc.
Bewkes noted that Time Warner Cable has different financial needs
than Time Warner's other businesses, and may be better off on
its own. Cable companies tend to be able to support far larger
amounts of debt than other companies, given their consistent cash
flows, and they also have needs for significant investments to
build infrastructure.
Time Warner reported net income of $1.03 billion or 28 cents
per share, versus $1.75 billion or 44 cents per share in the same
period a year ago.
Without one-time items, the earnings were 29 cents per share,
in line with estimates of analysts polled by Thomson Financial.
Profits were 23 cents per share a year ago.
Revenues rose 2 percent to $12.64 billion, close to the $12.65
billion expected by analysts.
Earnings from Time Warner Cable rose 19 percent on a 12 percent
gain in revenues, as the company continued to digest cable systems
from Adelphia Communications Corp.
Despite growth in premium cable services like digital phone and
high-speed Internet access, investors are worried about competition
from phone companies offering video services. Time Warner's cable
unit reported a decline of 50,000 basic video subscribers in the
fourth quarter.
Time Warner's movie and TV production business had a strong quarter,
with earnings up 46 percent on a 13 percent gain in revenue. Will
Smith's movie ''I Am Legend'' set a record for a December film
opening.
AOL posted an earnings increase of 29 percent despite a 32 percent
decline in revenues, as the company shed another 740,000 dial-up
access subscribers. The current total of 9.3 million subscribers
is down 3.8 million from last year. AOL sold its Internet access
businesses in the United Kingdom and France for a pretax gain
of $769 million last year.
Time Warner expects to report full-year earnings for 2008 in
the range of $1.07 per share to $1.11 per share. Analysts polled
by Thomson had been expecting $1.11 per share.
For all of 2007, Time Warner reported income of $4.39 billion
or $1.17 per share, versus $6.55 billion or $1.55 per share in
2006. Revenues rose 6 percent to $46.48 billion.
Source: Associated Press
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