![]()
- Credit Markets on Edge About When Fed Will Raise Rates
- Bove: Expect Goldman To Increase Dividend Meaningfully
- Bullish Sign for Gold: Central Banks Are Big Buyers
- Victoria's Secret Hopes to Rekindle Desire for Lingerie
- High Roller Sues Harrah's for Lost Millions
- Wall Street Jobs Slow to Return Despite Record Profits
- Big Shareholders Ask Goldman to Cut Bonuses: Report
- Buying an Expensive House? Government Can Help
- Review: What It's Like to Drive the New Chevy Volt
- How Stock Investors Can Play Holiday Travel
- Time Lapse World Series Is A Great Play
- Hirschhorn: Greed...or Fear
- My Top 10 Tech Toys for the Holidays
- iPhone a Better Gaming Platform Than Android?
- May Day For Dendreon
- 100% Mortgage Financing From USDA
- Holiday Tipping: Who And How Much
- Deep Discounts Should Make It a Very Tech-y Holiday
MOST SHARED
- Nielsen Ratings Coming to Video Games
- US Wants China to Buy into Its Small Banks
- Confessions of a Black Friday Shopper
- This Holiday Season—Little Joy For Those Hard Hit
- Twilight, Inc., A Worldwide Craze
- 'New Moon' Midnight Showings Earn Record $26.3 Million
- Oil Next Week
- Time Lapse World Series Is A Great Play
- Warren Buffett to CNBC: Curbing Fed's Independence Could Lead to 'Mischief'
- Nov. 20: Unusual Volume Leaders
Media conglomerate Time Warner said on Monday it will spin off its AOL unit to shareholders on Dec. 9, nine tumultuous years after one of the most disastrous corporate mergers in history.
![]() |
Mark Lennihan / AP The Time Warner building. |
Time Warner shareholders of record on Nov. 27 will receive an AOL stock dividend for every 11 shares of Time Warner common stock they hold
Based on the closing price of Time Warner's stock at $32.35 and its 1.17 billion outstanding shares, the ratio would effectively value AOL's market capitalization at around $3.44 billion.
When AOL's plan to merge with Time Warner was announced in January 2000, the Internet company was valued at $163 billion.
The combination was meant to herald the future of content distribution via the Internet, but the promised benefits were never achieved and Time Warner executives gradually regained control of the business.
Time Warner, which owns media brands such as CNN, HBO and Warner Bros, said back in May it planned to spin off AOL as it focuses on being a content company. Last year, it spun off its cable distribution unit, Time Warner Cable.
In March, Time Warner appointed former Google sales executive Tim Armstrong chief executive of AOL to prepare the company for life as an independent business.
Armstrong will spend most of the next few weeks on a road show speaking with Time Warner shareholders and Wall Street analysts about the prospects for AOL in Web advertising, online content and communications, where he sees the company's future.
"This is a chance for Tim to show he truly excels at sales," said Colin Gillis, an analyst at Brigantine Advisors. "He needs to sell to investors that AOL can recover and be relevant."
Armstrong has been been cutting staff and restructuring the company ahead of the spin. On Nov. 12, AOL said in a regulatory filing that it expects to take $200 million in additional restructuring charges between the current quarter and through the first half of 2010.
New Stock
AOL common stock will begin trading on a 'when-issued' basis on the New York stock Exchange on Nov. 24 and will start trading under the 'AOL' symbol on Dec. 10.
Time Warner said fractional shares of AOL will not be distributed to stockholders. Instead, they will be aggregated and sold in the open market, with the net proceeds distributed pro rate in the form of cash payments to Time Warner holders who would otherwise have been entitled to fractional shares.
The AOL spin-off has been structured so shareholders will receive the AOL stock as a tax-free dividend, but cash received in lieu of fractional shares will be taxable.
Separately, Time Warner said it will pay a regular quarterly cash dividend of $0.1875 per share on Dec. 9.
- Technology can make or break a fortune in the world of alternative energy.
- Many people are facing the holidays with substantially smaller incomes. Here’s how some are adapting.
- Jim Cramer is a proponent of stocks that pay healthy dividends, and here are his top five dividend plays.
- From salt, to lip balm to envelopes, it turns out that bacon flavoring can sell almost anything.
- The homebuyer's tax credit jacked sales for a while, but 2010 is looking weak. Now what?
- CNBC’s technology reporter Jim Goldman guides you through the best gadgets to buy this holiday season.













