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To: puborectalis who wrote (29041)8/10/1999 4:45:00 AM
From: puborectalis  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 41369
 
AOL may still have a chance at cable
networks

Filed at 5:30 p.m. EDT

By Corey Grice, CNET News.com

For all of America Online's bluster concerning
its high-speed cable rivals, one question
remains: Why doesn't the world's largest
Internet access provider just buy its own
cable company?

A year ago, AOL--the world's largest dial-up
Net service provider--could have acquired a
cable operator, or, like its recent $1.5 billion
investment in Hughes Electronics, taken a stake in a cable firm to gain
access to its high-speed, or broadband, networks. The company's stock
price was riding high and, at that time, several cable operators were on
the block.

Instead, AT&T, driven by a desire to circumvent the Baby Bells and tap
into the $110 billion local telephone market, beat its communications
competitors to the punch by snagging Tele-Communications
Incorporated and MediaOne Group--potentially reshaping the local
phone market, if not the entire communications industry.

To a certain extent, there is a sense among industry watchers that the
industry, following AT&T's decisive moves, has ceded the high-speed
cable Net market to the telecommunications giant.

But industry observers believe AOL has not lost its chance to be a player
in the expected cable-based Net access boom, choosing to sit out the
first round of the industry's growth, while others--such as rival
Excite@Home--work out the kinks.

AOL has spent months at the head of a local government-focused push
for new regulations to allow Internet service providers (ISPs) access to
cable TV networks. With the exception of two municipalities that have
voted in favor of "open access," AOL's fight has been largely
unsuccessful.

Shut out of the cable game for now, AOL is piecing together a
high-speed access strategy based on alternatives technologies, including
satellite and digital subscriber lines (DSL), the local phone firms'
competing broadband access technology.

Some industry watchers still expect AOL to sign pacts with cable
operators, particularly once Excite@Home's exclusive relationships
expire in 2002. Many analysts believe AOL will ink deals with the cable
industry soon, yet stress that the online leader will be better served by not
buying its way into the cable club.

AOL's cable options
Net companies, many of which have overvalued share prices, frequently
use their stock as currency in acquiring other "dot com" startups. But
outside of the online world, Net stocks, including AOL's, carry less
weight.

As such, some analysts believe AOL couldn't buy its way into the cable
industry even if it wanted to.

"They just don't have the cash [to buy a cable TV company]," said Bruce
Leichtman, director of media and entertainment strategies for market
research firm The Yankee Group. "Would someone want to trade their
solid cable asset for AOL's volatile stock?"

Not only would AOL's bank balance affect potential acquisitions, but
fewer sizable independent cable operators remain following AT&T's
foray into the industry with $110 billion in acquisitions in the past year.

Reports suggest AOL may be close to an alliance with AT&T, the largest
shareholder in Excite@Home, the No. 1 Net-over-cable company.

Yet Excite@Home executives today denied that AOL is on the verge of
ousting their company as the Web site most AT&T cable modem
customers first see when they go online.

"There are no discussions going on with AOL by either Excite@Home or
AT&T regarding current access of access in three years post our
contract," Excite@Home chief executive Tom Jermoluk wrote in an
internal memo to his company's employees today.

Looking ahead
Leichtman said alliances are not necessary because cable operators are
busy signing up anxious early broadband adopters.

"What it comes down to is they don't need each other today," he said.
"They need each other in about two years. They will need each other to
tap into the next wave of broadband customers."

Analysts believe an acquisition or investment by AOL in a cable
company would be unwise because AOL only would gain a few million
potential customers. The company clearly wants to market its service to a
national, and global, market.

"They [AOL] have a valuable asset in their subscriber base and
marketing. They need to leverage that asset across the entire industry, not
just one company," Leichtman said.

Different directions
Although the TCI deal gave AT&T a controlling stake in Excite@Home,
company executives have consistently said their driving force behind the
deal was to find a way into the lucrative local phone market.

Conversely, AOL--as a Net-based company--is interested in cable for
high-speed Net access and possibly interactive television, making cable
investments or acquisitions less attractive for the company.

AT&T's cable acquisitions make sense, as the firm's history as a
facilities-based provider that owns its own networks is well established.
For its part, AOL agreed to sell its proprietary network company, called
ANS Communications, to MCI WorldCom nearly two years ago as part
of a complicated three-way deal. In return, the online giant got $175
million in cash and the CompuServe online service.

"I don't think it really helps them to do an acquisition. They're sticking to
what they do best," said Philip Wohl, a telecommunications analyst with
financial publisher S&P Equity Group. "Trying to run these debt-laden
[cable] companies is not easy. [AOL is] doing the smart thing."

Some industry observers have suggested that AOL will simply be one of
several Internet access options for cable customers in the future. In the
same way that cable operators offer multiple movie channels such as
Showtime, Cinemax, and HBO. Excite@Home, AOL, and other ISPs
may all be carried on cable networks, they say.

News.com's John Borland contributed to this report.