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Economy
AOL Time Warner announces record loss
By Nick Beams
29 April 2002
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The extent of the financial bubble that developed in the US
economy in the late 1990s and the scale of false accounting that
accompanied it has been underscored by the announcement last week
by AOL Time Warner, the worlds largest media conglomerate,
of the biggest quarterly corporate loss in history.
The company announced a $54.2 billion loss after taking account
of the sharp decline in the value of stock used to finance the
merger of the two companies in January 2001. It beat the previous
record set by the fibre-optics company JDS Uniphase which announced
a loss of $41.8 billion in March last year.
The massive AOL Time Warner writedownequivalent to the
entire gross domestic product of countries such as Croatia, Uruguay
or Bulgariawas made necessary by new accounting rules governing
the valuation of so-called goodwill. Under the new regulations,
a fall in the value of goodwillthe premium paid for an acquisition
above the stated value of the assets obtainedcan no longer
be written off over a period of 40 years but must be recognised
when it occurs.
In the case of AOL Time Warner, the collapse has been dramatic.
Two years ago, when the deal was first proposed at the height
of the hi-tech boom in January 2000, the two companies had a combined
stock market value of $290 billion. Today AOL Time Warners
market value is around $85 billion.
Underlying this decline has been the emergence of recessionary
trends throughout the world economy, in particular in the hi-tech
sector.
As the Financial Times commented: Only a year
ago, it looked as though AOL was immune to the economics of the
internet bubble. The popular online service was gaining new subscribers
at the rate of about one million every two months, and it continued
to rake in advertising revenue.
Now, however, things look very different. Subscriber
growth is slowing, and the lucrative online advertising agreements
that it signed at the height of the internet boom have run out.
Worse, AOLs strategic vision of its futurethat its
growth would be fuelled by new, high-speed internet servicesis
now in doubt.
Overall AOL Time Warners advertising revenue fell by
13 percent, with the decline in the America Online division falling
by 31 percent. In the words of one analyst, the online ad
business has collapsed.
While the loss from the asset writedown is a paper one so far
as AOL Time Warner is concerned, it does have real consequences.
Above all, the losses will be born by millions of ordinary workers
whose pension fund contributions played such a key role in boosting
the share market.
The escalation in share values over the past decade was not
the product of a new economy or the result of increased
real profits arising from the employment of new technology. Rather,
it was the outcome of a continuous inflow of finance into the
equity markets as a wall of money pushed share values
way beyond historically normal levels. The more money which came
into the market, the higher the share values rose. And ever-larger
amounts of money were directed towards share market investments
as millions of workers and professional people found there was
no other way to secure the resources for the education of their
children and their own eventual retirement.
The scope of the increase is indicated by figures produced
by the OECD for the first half of the 1990s. These show that the
value of financial assets held by investor institutions in member
states (insurance companies, pension funds and investment companies)
rose by $9.8 trillion between 1990 and 1995 (an amount roughly
equivalent to the present GDP of the United States), an increase
of 75 percent. The average annual increase of almost $2 trillion
was equivalent to 10 percent of the GDP of the OECD countries
during that period.
This flow of funds into financial markets boosted share prices,
and enabled the financing of the type of merger deals which led
to the formation of the AOL Time Warner conglomerate. That was
not its only effect. Escalating share prices, financed to an ever-increasing
degree by the savings, pension funds and 401(k) plans of workers
and professional employees, facilitated the siphoning off of massive
amounts of wealth by a thin layer of executives and executive
staff, a veritable redistribution of wealth up the income scale.
An article in the May 6 edition of BusinessWeek noted
that management theorist Peter Drucker argued in the mid-1980s
that no CEO should receive more than 20 times the companys
lowest paid employee in order not to make a mockery of the contribution
of other employees.
After massive increases in compensation, it continued,
Druckers suggested standard looks quaint. CEOs of
large corporations last year made 411 times as much as the average
factory worker. In the past decade, as rank-and-file wages increased
36 percent, CEO pay climbed 340 percent, to $11 million.
This concern with income inequality reflects a fear that the
increasing revelations of the outright fraud and looting at the
heart of corporate America could have far-reaching political consequences.
As BusinessWeek commented: Faith in Corporate
America hasnt been so strained since the early 1900s, when
the publics furor over the monopoly powers of big business
led to years of trust-busting by Theodore Roosevelt. The latest
wave of skepticism may have started with Enron Corps ugly
demise, but with each revelation of corporate excess of wrongdoing,
the goodwill built up by business during the boom of the past
decade has eroded a little more, giving way to suspicion and mistrust.
An unrelenting barrage of headlines that tell of Securities &
Exchange Commission investigations, indictments, guilty pleas,
government settlements, and financial restatements, and fines
has only lent greater credence to the belief that the system is
inherently unfair.
According to the magazines editorial, the problems arose
because between 1997 and 2000 some proportion of the business
elite moved into a different moral landscape from the rest of
the country and broke the rules of fairness and equity.
Therefore it is necessary to reform corporate governance
in order to reinstate them.
It is doubtful, however, such explanationsbased on the
assertion that a previously healthy system suddenly became afflicted
with the disease of greed and corruption at the end of the 1990sare
going to wash. As more facts come to light, it will become clear
that the looting of the economy, which has destroyed the life
savings and future of millions of people, is endemic to the profit
system itself.
See Also:
How Merrill Lynch boosted "junk"
stocks
[16 April 2002]
PBS documentary probes initial
public offering swindles of 1990s
[20 March 2002]
The Enron collapse and the
crisis of the profit system
[29 January 2002]
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