Stephen Brook, advertising correspondent 

Time Warner back in the red

2.30pm: Time Warner has posted its first loss since 2002 as a £1.35bn lawsuit settlement and lack of a hit film to match the Lord the Rings and Harry Potter franchises plunged the group into the red. By Stephen Brook.
  
  


Time Warner has posted its first loss since 2002 as a £1.35bn lawsuit settlement and lack of a hit film to match the Lord the Rings and Harry Potter franchises plunged the group into the red.

The media giant posted a £180m quarterly loss after it settled a suit with shareholders who had accused the company of overstating advertising revenue by £1.7bn at its America Online internet division between 1999 and 2002.

Today's loss compared with a £437m net profit in the same quarter last year.

The £1.35bn settlement is the second largest by a public company in US corporate history and means the Time Warner has paid more than £1.96bn in total to resolve the accounting issues at America Online, which was forced to reduces its stated earnings from advertising by £382m between 2000 and 2003.

Millions of investors will share the settlement, which includes a £56m payment from Ernst & Young, Time Warner's auditor. Time Warner has also paid £287m to the US Securities and Exchange Commission and Department of Justice. The company's revenue fell 1% to £6bn, below expectations, while a flat US box office saw revenue from its Warner Bros film subsidiary fall 24% to £1.33bn.

Ticket sales for 2005 movies - which included Monster-in-Law with Jane Fonda and Jennifer Lopez, and Batman Begins - failed to match sales for Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and Troy last year.

The film industry hopes for a rebound in box office takings in the second half of 2005.

Growth of digital phone customers and high-speed internet subscribers from Time Warner's cable unit helped to offset losses elsewhere.

The company is also seeking a bigger slice of the £5.5bn US online advertising market, which Google dominates.

Time Warner's board has approved £2.81bn in stock repurchases over the next two years, its first buyback since 2001.

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