Time Warner, Incorporated (TWX)
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Jeffrey L. Bewkes, Director/President/CEO
One Time Warner Center
New York, NY 10019-8016
US
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Phone: (212) 484-8000
Fax: (212) 489-6183
Latest news from Portfolio
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AOL's Blast From the PastMay 20 2008
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Time for ActionMay 08 2008
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What Will Become of AOL?Apr 30 2008
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Splitting Cable, Still Pondering AOLApr 30 2008
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Its a Bird, a Plane! No, a Court VictoryMar 31 2008
Portfolio.com Overview
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
The 1990 merger of Time Inc. and Warner Communications brought together two companies with extensive histories, Warner’s dating back to 1903 and Time Inc.’s starting in 1922 with Time magazine. Today, Time Warner, which merged with AOL in 2001, is the world’s largest media conglomerate, gathering $44.2 billion in revenue in 2006.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
Time Warner’s curse is the dreaded “synergy” of its properties. On the one hand, it’s simple to coordinate on-demand content from pay-cable networks when you own the cable provider, or to sell Matrix DVDs when you made the movies. On the other hand, a lagging division—like AOL or the company’s publishing unit—can drag down the stock price and snarl business operations. Hence, the 2006 invasion of noted corporate raider and major shareholder Carl Icahn, who started a proxy battle and attempted to oust management. He argued that the stock price could rise only if the company was split up. Icahn backed off after the cool response from the market and the media, but not before exposing some of the cracks in Time Warner’s massive facade. “We created our own monster,” C.E.O. Dick Parsons admitted in 2006. “We oversold the notion of synergy.”
Synergy aside, Warner banks on its brand strength. From Batman and Superman to Scooby-Doo and Neo, Warner Bros. Pictures has a treasure chest of franchises. The Lord of the Rings trilogy, produced by Warner-owned New Line Cinema, took in about $2.9 billion in global box office collections and then a further $3 billion in consumer products. New Line’s Wedding Crashers was the highest-grossing comedy of 2005. And then there’s Harry Potter, who might as well be tossing diamonds from his broom.
Warner Bros. Television Group produces such shows as ER, Gilmore Girls, and Two and a Half Men, and the company also owns the very successful H.B.O. Time Warner Cable is the nation’s second-largest cable operator. And Time Inc., the top consumer magazine producer in the country, publishes more than 150 titles worldwide, including People, Sports Illustrated, and Time. Though Time Inc. continues to lay off workers, InStyle and Real Simple prove the company can still launch blockbuster magazines in a tired print market.
WHAT THEY NEED TO FIX
In what the New York Times called “the worst merger in business history,” America Online purchased Time Warner in 2001 in a $106 billion deal. The company renamed itself AOL Time Warner and set about losing money. AOL had shown explosive growth in the 1990s thanks to its pioneering subscription-based browsing, online chat, and email services, but these days it lags behind other providers and has shed nearly 5,000 employees. Still, AOL had $7.8 billion in sales in 2006 and remains a force in the internet sector as it converts to an advertising-based model.
WHAT’S NEXT
The conglomerate plans to splinter—somewhat. In 2006, Time Warner said it would spin off the company’s cable service into a separately traded entity. Parsons recently said in an interview that growth for his and all other media conglomerates will come from international expansion. And the fifth movie in the Harry Potter franchise, which has so far garnered $3.5 billion at the box office, comes out in the summer of 2007. Gird your loins, Jack Sparrow. —Julia Ramey
The 1990 merger of Time Inc. and Warner Communications brought together two companies with extensive histories, Warner’s dating back to 1903 and Time Inc.’s starting in 1922 with Time magazine. Today, Time Warner, which merged with AOL in 2001, is the world’s largest media conglomerate, gathering $44.2 billion in revenue in 2006.
WHAT THEY GOT RIGHT
Time Warner’s curse is the dreaded “synergy” of its properties. On the one hand, it’s simple to coordinate on-demand content from pay-cable networks when you own the cable provider, or to sell Matrix DVDs when you made the movies. On the other hand, a lagging division—like AOL or the company’s publishing unit—can drag down the stock price and snarl business operations. Hence, the 2006 invasion of noted corporate raider and major shareholder Carl Icahn, who started a proxy battle and attempted to oust management. He argued that the stock price could rise only if the company was split up. Icahn backed off after the cool response from the market and the media, but not before exposing some of the cracks in Time Warner’s massive facade. “We created our own monster,” C.E.O. Dick Parsons admitted in 2006. “We oversold the notion of synergy.”
Synergy aside, Warner banks on its brand strength. From Batman and Superman to Scooby-Doo and Neo, Warner Bros. Pictures has a treasure chest of franchises. The Lord of the Rings trilogy, produced by Warner-owned New Line Cinema, took in about $2.9 billion in global box office collections and then a further $3 billion in consumer products. New Line’s Wedding Crashers was the highest-grossing comedy of 2005. And then there’s Harry Potter, who might as well be tossing diamonds from his broom.
Warner Bros. Television Group produces such shows as ER, Gilmore Girls, and Two and a Half Men, and the company also owns the very successful H.B.O. Time Warner Cable is the nation’s second-largest cable operator. And Time Inc., the top consumer magazine producer in the country, publishes more than 150 titles worldwide, including People, Sports Illustrated, and Time. Though Time Inc. continues to lay off workers, InStyle and Real Simple prove the company can still launch blockbuster magazines in a tired print market.
WHAT THEY NEED TO FIX
In what the New York Times called “the worst merger in business history,” America Online purchased Time Warner in 2001 in a $106 billion deal. The company renamed itself AOL Time Warner and set about losing money. AOL had shown explosive growth in the 1990s thanks to its pioneering subscription-based browsing, online chat, and email services, but these days it lags behind other providers and has shed nearly 5,000 employees. Still, AOL had $7.8 billion in sales in 2006 and remains a force in the internet sector as it converts to an advertising-based model.
WHAT’S NEXT
The conglomerate plans to splinter—somewhat. In 2006, Time Warner said it would spin off the company’s cable service into a separately traded entity. Parsons recently said in an interview that growth for his and all other media conglomerates will come from international expansion. And the fifth movie in the Harry Potter franchise, which has so far garnered $3.5 billion at the box office, comes out in the summer of 2007. Gird your loins, Jack Sparrow. —Julia Ramey
Portfolio Articles
-
AOL's Blast From the Past
S.E.C. sues eight former executives for accounting fraud.
May 20 2008 -
Time for Action
As other media titans moved boldly, Dick Parsons played defense. Now Jeff Bewkes has to fire up Time Warner.
May 08 2008 -
What Will Become of AOL?
With cable split set, Time Warner confronts its biggest problem.
Apr 30 2008 -
Splitting Cable, Still Pondering AOL
Jeff Bewkes seeks a leaner, stronger Time Warner.Apr 30 2008 -
Its a Bird, a Plane! No, a Court Victory
Heirs win a share of the Superman copyright.Mar 31 2008
News Feeds
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Reuters Business Summary
Reuters
Jul 16 2008
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Newspaper reports Microsoft, AOL continue talks
AP
Jul 16 2008
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AOL talks with Microsoft, Yahoo heat up: source
Reuters
Jul 16 2008
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AT&T launches TV, Internet and phone bundle
Dayton
Jul 14 2008
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Closing Glance: Most media companies' shares fall
AP
Jul 11 2008
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Opening Glance: Media companies' shares fall
AP
Jul 11 2008
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Time Warner Cable sells cable system group
AP
Jul 11 2008
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Uncertainty aplenty as Web, media leaders convene
AP
Jul 08 2008
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Digital threat prompts movie industry downgrade
AP
Jul 07 2008
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Report: Yahoo renews talks with potential partners
Austin
Jul 03 2008
Portfolio Blogs
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First Bytes: Yahoo, Time Warner, Google, Adobe, more...
Jul 03 2008
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Idle Chatter: Which Way Does the Wind Blow?
Jun 06 2008
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The Time Warner Cable Control Premium: $0
May 21 2008
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Time Warner: What a Mess
Apr 29 2008
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Idle Chatter: Whipped Cream Is Not Clothing
Mar 25 2008
Press Releases
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Fitch Publishes Reports on Time Warner Inc. & The Walt Disney Company Jul-23-2008, 02:56PM EDT
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Seven Summits Research Releases Alerts on GE, V, TWX, ESV, and FLS Jul-15-2008, 09:31AM EDT
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Seven Summits Research Releases Comments on DNA, PCLN, TWX, SBUX, and ENER Jun-30-2008, 10:41AM EDT
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Seven Summits Research Releases Alerts on AXP, TWX, GLW, ALL, and FDO Jun-18-2008, 09:31AM EDT
News From Around the Web
News
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Exposed Cable Concerns Reach Beyond Garland
(NBC 5 Dallas (KXAS))Jul 26 2008 -
Time Warner should be handled now
(Daily Pilot)Jul 26 2008 -
TIme Warner inks big Herndon lease with Brandywine
(Orlando Business Journal)Jul 26 2008 -
Time Warner To Host Presidential Election Media Summit
(Multichannel News)Jul 25 2008 -
Time Warner Sets ‘Politics 2008’ Conference
(Broadcasting & Cable)Jul 25 2008 -
Analysts expect Q2 pain
(Hollywood Reporter)Jul 24 2008 -
Woman Wants Cable Company To Clean Up Mess
(NBC 5 Dallas (KXAS))Jul 24 2008 -
NCTA’s Vest Joins Time Warner
(Broadcasting & Cable)Jul 24 2008 -
Time Warner merges Buffalo and Rochester
(BizJournals)Jul 23 2008
Blogs
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Time Warner and AT&T DNS at Risk Plus Many Others!
(Geek News Central)Jul 25 2008 -
The Entire D6 Interview With Time Warner’s Jeff Bewkes (3 of 4) [BoomTown]
(All Things Digital)Jul 25 2008 -
Is Disney's 'High School Musical' fad fading?
(Blogging Stocks)Jul 23 2008 -
Road Runner Hawaii Vulnerable to DNS Threat
(Geek News Central)Jul 23 2008 -
New place, new stories
(Angry Bear)Jul 22 2008
Employees
Number of Employees: 86,400
Revenue per Employee: $499,525
Top Executives
John K. Martin, Jr., Executive VP/CFO
Carol A. Melton, Divisional Executive VP
Olaf Olafsson, Executive VP
Edward I. Adler, Divisional Executive VP
Patricia Fili-Krushel, Divisional Executive VP
Paul T. Cappuccio, Executive VP/General Counsel
Pascal Desroches, Chief Accounting Officer/Controller/Senior VP
Board of Directors
Financials
Quarterly
Annual
| Income Statement | 04/2008 | 02/2008 | 11/2007 | 08/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 4.34 Bil. | -7.21 Bil. | 2.98 Bil. | 4.8 Bil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 7.08 Bil. | 19.86 Bil. | 8.69 Bil. | 6.18 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 4.6 Bil. | 19.86 Bil. | 6.29 Bil. | 3.78 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 1.95 Bil. | 12.64 Bil. | 2.18 Bil. | 2.1 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | 771 Mil. | 1.03 Bil. | 1.09 Bil. | 1.07 Bil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 0.22 | 0.29 | 0.3 | 0.28 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 0.21 | 0.28 | 0.29 | 0.28 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 04/2008 | 02/2008 | 11/2007 | 08/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 1.6 Bil. | 1.52 Bil. | 1.87 Bil. | 890 Mil. |
| Total Assets | 11.41 Bil. | 12.45 Bil. | 10.64 Bil. | 9.46 Bil. |
| Total Liabilities | 11.43 Bil. | 12.19 Bil. | 10.9 Bil. | 10.25 Bil. |
| Total Capitalization | 94.76 Bil. | 95.54 Bil. | 95.2 Bil. | 95.04 Bil. |
| Cash Flow | 04/2008 | 02/2008 | 11/2007 | 08/2007 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | 2.8 Bil. | 8.79 Bil. | 6.45 Bil. | 3.2 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | -1.21 Bil. | -4.02 Bil. | -2.07 Bil. | -971 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | -1.5 Bil. | -4.49 Bil. | -3.76 Bil. | -2.81 Bil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | 87 Mil. | -33 Mil. | 324 Mil. | -659 Mil. |
| Income Statement | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sales | 17.61 Bil. | 18.83 Bil. | 18.88 Bil. | 18.94 Bil. |
| Gross Operating Profit | 28.87 Bil. | 25.4 Bil. | 24.77 Bil. | 23.15 Bil. |
| Operating Income before D & A (EBITDA) | 19.22 Bil. | 14.84 Bil. | 14.29 Bil. | 12.85 Bil. |
| Total Income Before Interest Expenses (EBIT) | 9.38 Bil. | 8.8 Bil. | 5.64 Bil. | 6.91 Bil. |
| Total Net Income | 4.39 Bil. | 6.55 Bil. | 2.9 Bil. | 3.36 Bil. |
| Basic EPS, Total | 1.18 | 1.57 | 0.62 | 0.74 |
| Diluted EPS, Total | 1.17 | 1.55 | 0.62 | 0.72 |
| BALANCE STATEMENT | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cash and Equivalents | 1.52 Bil. | 1.55 Bil. | 4.22 Bil. | 6.14 Bil. |
| Total Assets | 12.45 Bil. | 10.85 Bil. | 13.46 Bil. | 14.64 Bil. |
| Total Liabilities | 12.19 Bil. | 12.78 Bil. | 12.59 Bil. | 14.62 Bil. |
| Total Capitalization | 95.54 Bil. | 95.32 Bil. | 82.95 Bil. | 81.47 Bil. |
| Cash Flow | 2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Net Cash From Continuing Operations | 8.79 Bil. | 9.88 Bil. | 4.98 Bil. | 6.62 Bil. |
| Net Cash From Investing Activities | -4.02 Bil. | -12.47 Bil. | -2.5 Bil. | -503 Mil. |
| Net Cash From Financing Activities | -4.49 Bil. | 1.2 Bil. | -4.39 Bil. | -3.02 Bil. |
| Net Change in Cash & Cash Equivalents | -33 Mil. | -2.67 Bil. | -1.92 Bil. | 3.1 Bil. |
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