Time Warner Inc., the world's largest media company, reported
first-quarter profit fell 36 percent on declines at the AOL
Internet-access business and said it will separate its cable-systems
unit.
Net income dropped to $771 million, or 21 cents a share,
from $1.2 billion, or 31 cents, a year earlier, New York-based
Time Warner said today in a statement. Excluding some items,
earnings of 22 cents trailed the 23 cent average of 17 analysts'
estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Sales rose 2.1 percent to
$11.4 billion.
AOL's profit declined, while earnings at Time Warner's cable-systems,
publishing and TV networks units increased. By getting rid
of Time Warner Cable Inc., Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey
Bewkes is responding to pressure from investors to focus on
the company's entertainment businesses.
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``If you separate out cable, the content business is cheap,''
said Paul Greene, media analyst at T. Rowe Price Associates
Inc. in Baltimore, which owns more than 59 million Time Warner
shares among its $400 billion in assets. ``If they get cash
from cable and use that to buy back shares of the parent company,
that's very accretive.''
Time Warner shares, down 34 percent from a 2007 high, rose
16 cents to $15.27 yesterday in New York Stock Exchange composite
trading.
Buybacks
Bewkes, 55, who became CEO in January, said in February he
would complete a review of Time Warner's cable stake by the
end of this month. Chris Marangi, a fund manager at Gamco
Investors Inc. in Rye, New York, said splitting off the company's
84 percent stake in Time Warner Cable would provide cash to
repurchase $3.8 billion in stock.
``We've decided that a complete structural separation of
Time Warner Cable, under the right circumstances, is in the
best interests of both companies' shareholders,'' Bewkes said
in the statement today. ``We're working hard on an agreement
with Time Warner Cable, which we expect to finalize soon.''
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