Microsoft in talks with Time Warner over AOL !

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http://money.cnn.com/2005/09/15/technology/aol_microsoft/index.htm


NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Time Warner stock rallied Thursday on reports that
it's holding talks with Microsoft regarding an alliance with or investment
in America Online.

A source close to the situation told CNN that there have been discussions
between the two companies on how to leverage the search and advertising
components of the businesses. This person said it's conceivable there could
be an investment down the road, but that there was no deal yet.

The New York Post, which first reported the story, said that under terms
being discussed, Time Warner (up $0.59 to $18.51, Research) would be equal
partners with Microsoft (down $0.01 to $26.30, Research) in a combination of
AOL and Microsoft's MSN Internet unit. Microsoft would give Time Warner some
cash in addition to contributing MSN to it, the report said.

Officials at Time Warner and Microsoft had no comment on the reports.

Wall Street analysts who follow Microsoft said the story in the Post was the
first they had heard of the talks. They said that if a deal is struck, it
could be reviewed by the Department of Justice.

Part of Microsoft's goal in the talks is to get AOL to switch to its search
engine, according to a separate report in the Wall Street Journal. AOL
currently uses Google's search technology, and gets 110 million site
visitors a month, making it Google's single largest revenue source,
according to the paper.

The Post reported that the companies are hopeful they can wrap a deal up
within the next couple of months, but that Time Warner is also holding
discussions with Internet search leaders Yahoo! (Research) and Google
(Research) over a sale or venture with AOL in case the Microsoft
negotiations fall apart.

Time Warner, the world's largest media company, was purchased by America
Online, but the combined company's stock has performed badly since the
January 2001 closing of the deal. CNN/Money is a unit of Time Warner.

The New York-based company is under pressure from a shareholder group led by
financier Carl Icahn, who is pushing for the company to sell some units and
repurchase more outstanding shares in an effort to raise stock price.

While AOL is profitable, reporting revenue of $8.6 billion and operating
income of $1.1 billion in the 12 months ended June 30, it has continued to
lose subscribers as customers leave its core dial-up service for high-speed
Internet connections.

At the end of June, it had 20.8 million subscribers, down 2.6 million from a
year earlier and down 5.7 million from three years ago. AOL is seeking to
shift to a more advertising-based portal model, rather than one that depends
upon subscription revenue.

Icahn has called for a sale of the company's cable unit, which Merrill Lynch
estimates could fetch $40 billion, while it puts the value of AOL at only
$8.8 billion.

But Mario Gabelli, whose Gabelli Asset Management owns more than 15 million
shares of Time Warner, estimated at an investor conference earlier this
month that if AOL's portal strategy is successful, the AOL unit could be
worth $50 billion.

The pressure from Icahn increased Monday when he announced that his group,
which holds a 2.6 percent stake in Time Warner, would seek seats on the
company's board.

The Post also said in its report that Time Inc., Time Warner's magazine
unit, could be sold in 2006 if its performance doesn't improve.
 
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In article <OM-dnb4dodevSrTeRVn-2w@comcast.com>, <RSX> wrote:

> NEW YORK (CNN/Money) - Time Warner stock rallied Thursday on reports that
> it's holding talks with Microsoft regarding an alliance with or investment
> in America Online.

Just one more step to, total world domination, by Bill Gates.

> At the end of June, it had 20.8 million subscribers, down 2.6 million from a
> year earlier and down 5.7 million from three years ago. AOL is seeking to
> shift to a more advertising-based portal model, rather than one that depends
> upon subscription revenue.

I expect the slide to accelerate, and AOL to become even lamer, just as
happened to WebTV, when Micro$oft, bought it.

Actually that could be a good thing. Who the hell needs dial-up service,
and AOL bloatware, today?

To bad AOLTV, isn't still around, so it could be merged with MSNTV. That
would be cool.

--

"Most of our users don't know what an URL is. What people
don't realize about WebTV is that the main characteristics
that people buy it for are reliability and ease of use,
not innovation," Steve Perlman 1998

"They say I talk a lil fast, but if you listen a lil faster
I ain't got to slow down for you to catch up, BITCH" 50 Cent, 2003