Time Warner Inc said it would split AOL's dial-up Internet and advertising businesses into separate divisions by early 2009, a move that could ease a sale or merger of either business. The media conglomerate also reported a lower quarterly profit, dragged by AOL.
But it still slightly beat Wall Street expectations on strong advertising sales from its cable TV networks such as CNN and films like "Sex and the City." The AOL split underscores Time Warner's focus on creating content rather than distributing it. "As we continue to reshape Time Warner, we'll increasingly focus on our goal to create and manage high-quality branded content," Chief Executive Jeffrey Bewkes said.
The company has said it plans to shed its cable services division, Time Warner Cable, by the end of the year. Time Warner has also been in talks to combine the AOL advertising business with either Yahoo Inc or Microsoft Corp, while EarthLink Inc signalled last week that it could be interested in buying dial-up businesses.
"A separation of AOL would eliminate what's been a drag on growth and a management distraction," said Christopher Marangi, associate portfolio manager at Gabelli & Co, a Time Warner investor. "We look forward to hearing more about structural alternatives there."
AOL revenue fell 16 percent in the second quarter, reflecting a 29 percent drop in subscription revenue as it lost 604,000 subscribers. It ended the quarter with 8.1 million US subscribers. Online advertising revenue rose 2 percent, as growth in ads displayed on sites not owned by AOL offset a decline in display ads on AOL-owned sites. Operating income fell 36 percent.
"Some of (Time Warner's) businesses most exposed to advertising, like a lot of the other companies that reported so far, did worse on revenue, but had other revenue sources like subscriptions to offset that," said David Joyce, analyst at Miller Tabak & Co LLC.
Time Warner's second-quarter net income fell 26 percent to $792 million, or 22 cents per share, from $1.07 billion, or 28 cents per share, a year earlier, when it logged big gains including from the sale of its interest in Bookspan.
Excluding items such as $51 million in legal and professional fees, and impairment charges from cable systems and Turner networks, profit was 24 cents per share, exceeding analyst expectations of 23 cents, according to Reuters Estimates.
Revenue rose 5 percent to $11.56 billion, ahead of Wall Street forecasts of $11.45 billion. Time Warner affirmed its full-year forecast that adjusted operating income before depreciation and amortisation would rise 7 percent to 9 percent, though it said growth would most likely come at the low end of that range. It saw earnings per share from continuing operations at $1.07 to $1.11.
The second quarter was another reminder of why the owner of HBO, Time Inc and Warner Bros is keen on structural changes to put its movies and cable programming back in the spotlight. Film division revenue rose 14 percent and operating income rose 16 percent from the hit movie "Sex And The City" and higher contributions from home videos "I Am Legend," "10,000 B.C." and video games including "LEGO Indiana Jones."
Cable networks revenue rose 9 percent, helped by a 10 percent rise in subscription revenue and 11 percent gain in ad revenue. More viewers and higher ad rates at Turner Broadcasting's entertainment and news networks boosted ad sales. Operating profit rose 18 percent.
While cable networks advertising held up well for Time Warner, Lehman Brothers analyst Anthony DiClemente said industry-wide ad sales are deteriorating across the board this year. Revenue from Time Warner Cable rose 7 percent to $4.3 billion and operating profit rose 4 percent from gains in new broadband, digital phone and video customers. It lost 9,000 basic video customers in the quarter.
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