AT&T May Sell Internet-Access Lines To AtHome for $1 Billion in Stock
By KARA SWISHER and REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN Staff Reporters of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
AT&T Corp. is considering selling its Internet-access business to AtHome Corp., including its WorldNet consumer dial-up service, in an attempt to improve its competitive position against America Online Inc., people familiar with the situation said.
Under terms of the deal being discussed, these people said, AT&T would still have control over WorldNet via another, far larger deal it is now completing.
In a potential deal for WorldNet, AtHome would pay $1 billion in stock to the long-distance leader to take over the service. AtHome, a Redwood City, Calif., high-speed access service that just agreed to buy Excite Inc., would take over WorldNet's 1.3 million residential customers and nearly one million business customers. WorldNet had acquired the business customers from its recent $5 billion acquisition of International Business Machines Corp.'s global network.
But the people familiar with the negotiations cautioned that any deal was contingent on a much larger deal pending for AT&T, its $40.9 billion acquisition of cable giant Tele-Communications Inc., expected to close in mid-February. Any deal for WorldNet, one of a number of options being considered by AT&T, isn't expected to be finalized until the TCI acquisition is complete, they said.
Such a deal would leave AT&T with substantial influence over the WorldNet service, because TCI is a controlling shareholder in AtHome. But shifting WorldNet to an independent company could help AT&T to get an Internet-style valuation for that business while removing WorldNet expenses from its financial statements.
AT&T would continue to operate the communications network used by WorldNet and would jointly market it with AtHome, these people said.
Role of Excite
Excite, a popular Internet search and directory service, would provide information services and other programming to the former WorldNet customers, assuming its purchase by AtHome is completed.
Representatives for AtHome and AT&T declined to comment on the matter.
The talks are the latest in a whirlwind round of deal making by major companies with Internet interests, which are trying to boost their audiences and stake out valuable turf ahead of rivals. People familiar with the matter said the possibility of acquiring WorldNet was an important consideration in AtHome's deal for Excite, valued at $6.7 billion when first announced.
AtHome, specializing in delivering Internet access over cable TV lines using special modems, now has only 330,000 customers. It could immediately boost its total customer base by acquiring WorldNet, and later persuade customers to upgrade its cable-based service.
For AT&T, such a transaction could reduce its involvement in the consumer-access business, a field that has proved less lucrative than many telephone companies expected, while advancing its other Internet goals. Though WorldNet is the No. 2 online service, it lags well behind AOL, which has 15 million customers.
AT&T Chairman C. Michael Armstrong, noting that AT&T was late to embrace the Internet, has signaled the company needs to take more aggressive action. One of the strategies being considered is placing all of AT&T's online-service interests in AtHome, a publicly traded company that enjoys the high valuations being accorded Internet concerns.
High Degree of Control
The deal with AtHome, as envisioned, would leave AT&T with a high degree of control. When it acquires TCI, AT&T will assume TCI's 58% share in voting stock of AtHome. Currently, TCI holds roughly 28% of AtHome's common shares, though if warrants and options outstanding of employees are exercised, AT&T could see that fall to about 21%. Both the voting and economic interest could be diluted further by the deal to buy Excite, people familiar with the situation said. But it is expected that after the TCI deal, AT&T will continue to have voting control of AtHome.
AT&T, which held preliminary talks with AOL last year about buying that company, views TCI's cable assets and AtHome as giving the telecommunications company an inside track in the race to expand high-speed online access to consumers.
Mr. Armstrong was consulted about the purchase of Excite throughout the negotiations, people familiar with the matter said. Indeed, AT&T is a party in the voting agreement that TCI signed to broker the Excite deal.
In a statement on the day the deal was announced, Mr. Armstrong said, "On its own and when integrated with the broad range of AT&T communications services, the AtHome and Excite combination will provide the consumer with a compelling interactive experience."
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