Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Time Warner nears $750m settlement over AOL scandal

Katherine Griffiths
Wednesday 24 November 2004 01:00 GMT
Comments

Time Warner, the world's largest media group, is nearing an agreement to pay up to $750m (£401m) in a settlement with the US regulator over wide-ranging allegations of accounting irregularities at its America Online internet business.

Time Warner, the world's largest media group, is nearing an agreement to pay up to $750m (£401m) in a settlement with the US regulator over wide-ranging allegations of accounting irregularities at its America Online internet business.

The sum would be one of the largest settlements the Securities and Exchange Commission has extracted from a company, and $250m more than Time Warner announced earlier this month that it was reserving to cover a possible payment.

The SEC began to investigate the disclosure, advertising arrangements and treatment of subscriber numbers at AOL in 2002. The investigation has also focused on transactions with Germany's Bertelsmann.

The SEC has insisted that Time Warner restate the way it accounted for transactions with Bertelsmann in the months following the AOL merger, a request that Time Warner initially rejected. The SEC's chief accountant has accused Time Warner and America Online of improperly counting $400m from Bertelsmann as AOL advertising revenue, when portions reflected payments for other purposes.

As part of the settlement, Time Warner would not admit SEC allegations that AOL improperly pumped up revenue and profit before or after the high-profile internet company bought Time Warner in 2001.

The deal would not end the continuing investigation by the SEC and Department of Justice into various individuals who worked for AOL. But by not having to admit guilt, Time Warner would be strengthened against a flood of shareholder class action lawsuits.

Richard Parsons, the chairman of Time Warner, has been involved in the discussions with the SEC, The Washington Post reported yesterday. He is trying to fast-track the process to give Time Warner flexibility in how it raises funds and pays for potential acquisitions.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in