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Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

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    Google admits its AOL investment may be impaired

    SAN FRANCISCO
    Fri Aug 8, 2008 5:32pm EDT
    People ride their bikes past Google Inc. headquarters in Mountain View, California, May 8, 2008. REUTERS/Kimberly White

    SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Google Inc's 5 percent stake in Time Warner Inc's AOL unit may be worth less than the $1 billion the Web company paid for it in 2006, Google warned in a regulatory filing on Thursday.

    Technology  |  Media

    "We believe our investment in AOL may be impaired," Google said in its latest quarterly financial filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

    Google said it would continue to review its investment for impairment, and financial write-downs could be required in the future.

    In a deal announced in December 2005 and which closed the following year, Google paid $1 billion in cash for a 5 percent indirect equity stake in AOL.

    The deal by the Mountain View, California-based company gave AOL a theoretical valuation of $20 billion at the time.

    In return, Google secured renewal of its search advertising deal with AOL, its largest ad partner, at least until Google's recent partnership with Yahoo takes effect in coming months, analysts say. Google's original pact with AOL in 2002 was the landmark deal that legitimized Google's advertising services.

    PREPARING TO SPLIT

    The formal admission by the Silicon Valley Internet giant that the value of its investment may have fallen follows recent moves by Time Warner to shape up AOL for a possible sale.

    Time Warner, which has been considering how it might dispose of AOL in order to focus on its core media properties, said on Wednesday it plans to split AOL's dial-up unit from its advertising business by early 2009.

    The move is a major step toward the eventual sale of one or both of the businesses, and would allow Time Warner to move beyond the troubled legacy of its 2001 mega-merger with America Online, which was then hailed as the "Deal of the Century."

    On July 1, Google received the right, but not the obligation, to force the media conglomerate to bring its Internet unit to the market, under terms of their 2006 deal.

    But at current market valuations, Google stands to lose an estimated $500 million if AOL is spun off, analysts estimate.

    AOL's $20 billion valuation, established at the time by Google's $1 billion investment, has been cut by roughly half to as low as $10 billion by some published projections.

    In the six quarters ending last December, AOL shed nearly half of its total subscribers, as 8.3 million cancellations left it with 9.3 million paying members.

    FALLING PRICE

    Working in AOL's favor has been the growing value of its advertising assets. According to a February report by brokerage Sanford C. Bernstein, less than 35 percent of AOL visitors are members, suggesting it is less reliant on dial-up subscribers. The report estimated at the time that AOL's advertising and media business alone could be worth as little as $10.1 billion and its dial-up access business worth about $3.7 billion.

    For more than a year, Time Warner has been in informal talks with partners ranging from Yahoo Inc to News Corp on potential deals involving its AOL unit, sources have previously told Reuters.

    To put the $1 billion investment in perspective, Google had $12.7 billion in cash as of June 30. It generated $1.77 billion in cash from operations in the second quarter from sales of advertising sold alongside search results on Google.com and affiliated Web sites such as AOL, MySpace and Ask.com.

    Google also gets an estimated $70 million to $80 million annually from AOL by providing search ad services, and is unlikely to want to risk AOL taking its business to rivals, analysts say.

    Google's investment in AOL allowed it to keep its long-standing ad partnership with AOL and deprived rival Microsoft from winning the deal during negotiations in 2005.

    (Additional reporting by Anupreeta Das in San Francisco and Kenneth Li in New York; Editing by Tim Dobbyn and Braden Reddall)



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