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- <text id=93TT1821>
- <title>
- May 31, 1993: The On Ramp to the Electronic Highway
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 31, 1993 Dr. Death: Dr. Jack Kevorkian
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 52
- Building the On Ramp to the Electronic Highway
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A $2.5 billion deal may launch an era of cooperation between
- phone and cable firms
- </p>
- <p>By PHILIP ELMER-DEWITT--With reporting by John F. Dickerson
- and Thomas McCarroll/New York
- </p>
- <p> For years, cable-TV operators and telephone companies have
- behaved like jealous rivals--spreading gossip about each other's
- weaknesses, whining to regulators about monopolistic bullying
- and watching with suspicion any attempt by one to poach on the
- other's territory. The sniping has grown even shriller in recent
- months as it became clear that the two industries were on a
- collision course in their separate efforts to build the so-called
- electronic super-highway--that futuristic information pipeline
- over which people will soon order up everything from the latest
- Hollywood movies to the hottest new video games.
- </p>
- <p> So it came as somewhat of a surprise when two of the biggest
- players--Time Warner, the nation's second largest cable operator,
- and U S West, the fifth largest telephone company--announced
- last week that they were becoming digital partners. In a deal
- that sent television-, telecommunications- and entertainment-industry
- analysts scrambling back to their spread sheets, the two companies
- announced a $2.5 billion strategic alliance in which U S West
- will supply technological savvy (and an infusion of badly needed
- cash) in return for 25.51% of Time Warner Entertainment, one
- of the world's largest collections of entertainment copyrights,
- including the film and TV properties of Warner Bros., HBO and
- Lorimar. (Time Warner's music and publishing operations, which
- include this magazine, are not part of Time Warner Entertainment
- and thus are excluded from the deal.)
- </p>
- <p> The marriage of two such powerful partners is certain to accelerate
- the conversion of modern cable TV into the two-way, interactive
- system that will allow consumers to order movies, browse through
- store merchandise, send pictures of the kids to Grandma, make
- phone calls and request a wide variety of information services--all by pushing buttons on their TV remote controls. Time
- Warner officials now say it will take five years--not 10,
- as previously estimated--for these new services to be rolled
- out to the company's 7.1 million cable subscribers.
- </p>
- <p> The deal is likely to reshape business alliances in both industries.
- Cable and telephone companies that once viewed themselves as
- fierce competitors are starting to eye each other as potential
- mates. "You can bet every major cable operator is talking to
- every phone company right now," says a cable-industry insider.
- Meanwhile, the deal could shatter whatever solidarity still
- exists among the so-called Baby Bells--the seven regional
- phone companies that were created by the breakup of AT&T in
- 1984. Until now, each has enjoyed a monopoly on local telephone
- service in its own region; long-distance phone companies had
- to pay a hefty fee to, say, BellSouth, in order to connect
- to a phone customer in Atlanta. But through its new alliance,
- U S West will, in theory, be able to provide local phone service
- to Time Warner cable subscribers outside the Western states,
- threatening to grab a share of the long-distance connect charges
- that account for a quarter of the Baby Bells' revenues and half
- their profits.
- </p>
- <p> What makes the marriage of the two industries so compelling
- is that each has something the other needs. The TV operators
- have built extensive networks of coaxial cable with enough information-carrying
- capacity (or bandwidth) to broadcast hundreds of TV channels
- simultaneously. The phone companies badly need that cable to
- replace their narrow copper wires, which can barely carry a
- single TV station. At the same time, phone companies have sophisticated
- switching and billing systems that the cable companies would
- otherwise have to build from scratch.
- </p>
- <p> The rational solution would be to combine both operations into
- a single system. There's one problem with that: it's illegal.
- The Cable Act, for example, forbids telephone companies to own
- more than 5% of a cable-TV programmer in their territory. The
- cable companies, meanwhile, are not allowed to provide basic
- telephone services through their coaxial lines.
- </p>
- <p> That's why previous efforts to merge TV and telephone interests
- have been relatively modest. Earlier this year, Southwestern
- Bell acquired two cable systems in the metro Washington area--far outside its operating region. Similarly, Pacific Telesis
- took an option to buy a cable system in Chicago, although it
- will need special permission to send cable programming to the
- system by satellite. Cox Enterprises and Tele-Communications
- Inc. (TCI), the world's largest cable-TV operator, joined forces
- last year to buy Teleport, a company that provides a telephone
- service not covered by the Cable Act: private branch exchanges
- to business customers.
- </p>
- <p> What made the Time Warner-U S West merger possible was an accident
- of geography: although U S West covers 14 states and Time Warner
- has cable franchises in 36 states, there is almost no overlap
- in the territories they cover. (Even so, the deal had to be
- crafted to avoid various regulatory pitfalls.) The way the transaction
- is structured, U S West pays Time Warner $2.5 billion over four
- years--$1 billion to upgrade Time Warner's cable systems and
- the rest to reduce its debt (which had ballooned to $16 billion
- since the 1989 merger of Time Inc. and Warner Communications).
- "What's driving this deal is technology, not finances," insists
- Time Warner chairman Gerald Levin. The key technology, he says,
- is the digital switch needed to route voice, text and video
- to each subscriber's home. Time Warner had planned to build
- the necessary switching system itself but realized about a year
- ago it needed help. "We underestimated the skills required,"
- says Levin. "I think the cable-TV industry has underestimated
- the difficulty of entering the telecommunications business."
- </p>
- <p> For its part, U S West has made what some see as a prescient
- investment in the movies and TV shows that will be carried over
- the information highways no matter who owns them. According
- to W. Russell Neuman, a communications expert at Tufts University,
- U S West has profited from the lesson Sony learned when it lost
- the VCR wars a decade earlier. Sony's Beta lost out to VHS because
- its competitors made better deals with the folks who held the
- intellectual-property rights--in this case, the movie companies.
- That, says Neuman, is why Sony bought CBS Records and Columbia
- Pictures. It's also why Toshiba and Itochu bought 12.5% of Time
- Warner Entertainment in 1991.
- </p>
- <p> Although the reaction on Wall Street was largely positive, some
- analysts focused on the assets Time Warner gave up. If U S West
- and the Japanese investors exercise all their options, the company
- could be left with barely more than 50% of the remaining stock
- in its entertainment division, cutting into the windfall it
- might otherwise realize should the new medium dramatically increase
- the value of its movies and TV shows. "The question is whether
- Time Warner is selling off its crown jewels in little pieces,"
- says David Londoner, an analyst at Wertheim Schroder.
- </p>
- <p> Some consumer groups wondered about the wisdom of putting the
- distribution system into the hands of the company that controls
- the information carried over it. "We were told that telephone
- companies would provide competition to cable companies," complains
- Jeffrey Chester, director of the Center for Media Education.
- "Instead of competition, what we are now seeing is the creation
- of a media supermonopoly."
- </p>
- <p> But officials in the Clinton Administration were briefed on
- the Time Warner-U S West deal before it was announced, and most
- observers expect the government to ease restrictions against
- cross-ownership, not tighten them. "If the law were changed
- tomorrow," says TCI CEO John Malone,"I believe there would be
- a wholesale merger of the telephone and cable companies." Some
- think it has already begun. "The train is leaving the station,"
- says Professor Neuman. "And everybody is scurrying to get on
- board before it departs."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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