Posted on 11/18/2001 9:54:34 PM PST by N00dleN0gg1n
Saudi Prince To Double Stake in AOL
By Lori Enos
NewsFactor Network
November 3, 2000
Billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal said Thursday that he intends to double his investment in America Online (NYSE: AOL), bringing his stake to a whopping $2.05 billion (US$).
Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal reportedly believes AOL is the 'anchor' of the Internet.
The prince decided to invest more heavily in AOL because he reportedly believes the company is the "anchor of the industry" and will flourish even though other high-tech companies are "collapsing and going under left and right."
"America Online is the No. 1 Internet company in the world and has a solid foundation and is making profit," the prince said in published reports. "When the dust settles on the dot-com industry, America Online will be around."
Triggered by AOL Results
The nephew of Saudi Arabia's King Fahd made his decision after Dulles, Virginia-based AOL announced its quarterly results.
Net income for the company's first quarter ended September 30th was $345 million, up from $181 million for the same period last year. AOL also said its subscriber base grew by 1.4 million during the quarter, reaching a total of more than 24.6 million.
At the close of trading Thursday, AOL was up $2 at $54.
Currently the sixth richest person in the world, Prince Alwaleed has an estimated net worth of $15 billion, a fortune he created from well-timed investments of his inheritance in both U.S. and European stocks.
The prince invested heavily in Citicorp in 1991, giving the company a sorely needed cash infusion of $590 million. That investment is now worth an estimated $5.8 billion.
King-Size Stock Dive
The prince's announcement comes after he lost an estimated $150 million on Internet investments made earlier this year.
In the spring, Prince Alwaleed announced $50 million investments in each of six Internet companies: Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN), eBay (Nasdaq: EBAY), DoubleClick (Nasdaq: DCLK), Infospace (Nasdaq: INSP), Internet Capital Group (Nasdaq NM: ICGE) and Priceline.com (Nasdaq NM: PCLN).
The prince, who is the chairman of the Kingdom Holding Group, reportedly studied more than 100 firms before selecting his "basket of Internet companies." However, estimates indicate that within a few months, Alwaleed lost nearly half of his $300 million initial investment.
Despite the steep drop in the value of the prince's Internet portfolio, Alwaleed is known as a buy-and-hold investor. Many analysts believe his Internet stock selections have long-term potential.
Autoworkers Get AOL
In related news, General Motors and DaimlerChrysler announced a partnership Thursday with AOL to provide Web access to nearly 300,000 U.S. autoworkers.
GM and DaimlerChrysler said they will work with the United Auto Workers (UAW) union to provide AOL service to their employees.
"It is imperative that all our employees have access to the Internet. The concept of having a Web-savvy workforce is at the heart of our business-to-employee strategy," said DaimlerChrysler president Jim Holden.
Who else owns part of CNN? The New York Times? Gannet? Is this a job for the Guild?
And they still pssss on us. Darn Arabs!!!!
Still, I wouldn't look for one to make a big donation to FreeRepublic anytime soon.
By JENNIFER 8. LEE
Nearly a dozen software companies,
most of them American, are competing
for a contract to help Saudi Arabia block
access to Web sites the Saudi government
deems inappropriate for that nation's half-
million Internet users.
For the companies, the Saudi account would
be important not only for the direct revenue
which analysts say could be worth several
million dollars but also for its value as a
flagship that could help win similar contracts
from other governments.
Pornographic sites, the biggest Internet
business in other countries, make up the
overwhelming majority of the sites blocked in
Saudi Arabia, distantly followed by sites that
may be sensitive for political or religious
reasons.
To critics of the sale of content filters,
software company executives say that they
are only providing politically neutral tools.
"Once we sell them the product, we can't
enforce how they use it," said Matthew Holt,
a sales executive for Secure Computing
(news/quote), of San Jose, Calif., that
currently provides Internet-filtering software
to the Saudi government under a contract that
expires in 2003.
Secure Computing hopes to renew that
contract but has competition from at least 10
other companies from the United States,
Britain, Germany and the Netherlands.
"This would be a terrific deal to win an
important deal to win," said Geoff Haggart, a
vice president at Websense (news/quote), a
San Diego company that has begun a
software trial with the Saudi government and
is considered a top contender for its contact.
Websense's current clients include more than
half of the Fortune 500 companies, the United
States Army and Saudi Aramco, the large
Saudi oil company. Other software that Saudi
Arabia has considered includes products from
Surf Control, a London company; N2H2, of
Seattle; and Symantec, a Cupertino, Calif.,
company.
Within the Islamic world, religious sensitivities and security-conscious regimes
can combine to create a technophobic atmosphere. Governments in Muslim
nations, among them Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates, have made
overtures to Internet filtering companies. But no Muslim nation has been as
active a user of the software as has Saudi Arabia. By royal decree, virtually all
public Internet traffic to and from Saudi Arabia has been funneled through a
single control center outside Riyadh since the Internet was introduced in the
kingdom nearly three years ago.
If the Riyadh center blocks a site, a warning screen pops up warning the user,
in English and Arabic, "Access to the requested URL is not allowed!"
"The Internet is a frightening place to some people," said Mr. Holt, who
oversees sales operations in the Middle East for Secure Computing. "The
government feels the need to intervene."
In Saudi Arabia, the government spent two years designing a centralized
control system before gingerly opening the spigot to the Internet in February
1999. At the time, the government selected Secure Computing's SmartFilter
software from four competing products from the United States, in part
because the company offered a discount. The company and Saudi officials
declined to disclose the contract terms.
SmartFilter came with ready-made categories like pornography and gambling
and was customized to include specific sites the Saudis perceived as defaming
Islam or the royal family.
With the Secure Computing contract set to expire in little more than a year,
rivals are actively courting Saudi technology officials. The companies are
promoting their expanded Arabic-language capabilities. They are selling their
ease of customization for sites considered anti-Islam or anti-royal family. They
are donating engineers to support trials, while steeply discounting their list
prices. One German company even offered the service for free, according to
an executive involved in the competition.
Corporate customers and the United States Army generally use filtering
software to prevent their users from viewing pornography, gambling or
otherwise frittering away time on the job. But Saudi Arabia is one of the
countries with the most centralized control of Internet content of various types,
according to a report by the advocacy group Reporters Without Borders.
Another country highlighted in the report is China, whose government blocks
various foreign media and human rights Web sites by using domestic software.
The United States government recently introduced a plan to establish a
computer network to help Chinese residents circumvent their government's fire
wall. But so far, Washington has not taken similar steps in Saudi Arabia, which
brooks little political dissent but is one of the United States' closest allies
among Middle Eastern Muslim nations.
"We have a really serious problem in terms of the American free speech idea,"
said Jack Balkin, a professor at the Yale Law School who studies the politics
of Internet filtering. "But it is very American to make money. Between
anticensorship and the desire to make money, the desire to make money will
win out."
Saudi security agencies identify the political Web sites that are considered for
inclusion on the blacklist. Among the banned sites are the Committee for the
Defense of Human Rights in the Arabian Peninsula (www.cdrhap.com) and
the Movement for Islamic Reform in Arabia (www.islah.org). Even some less
politically charged sites, including ones that recount the history of Saudi Arabia,
are blocked.
In response to Internet filtering, many Saudis either dial up foreign Internet
service providers, use Web sites that protect the user's identity or engage in a
cat-and-mouse game with Web sites that frequently change their addresses to
elude filters. (For such sites, like the one operated by Islah.org, would-be
visitors send e-mail to a fixed address and receive the new Web address.)
It is because filtering for an entire country is a logistically tricky task that the
Saudi government is looking for new software. "It's not that we are unhappy
with the product, we're just looking for a better solution," said Eyas S.
al-Hajery, who plays a major role in the selection process and has evaluated
various software filters.
The competition is up in the air, said Dr. Hajery, who directs the Information
Security Center at King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology, the
institution that serves as Saudi Arabia's Internet control valve. "We are very
open to try other choices," he said.
The marketing pitches pour in weekly through e-mails, phone calls and
in-person presentations. But the decision will have less to do with marketing
than customer service after the sale, Dr. Hajery said.
Customer service is important because Saudi Arabia's filtering effort is so
large in scope and so highly customized. The Saudi Internet staff says it tries
to be reasonable within the guidelines, and it provides Web forms for users to
request additions or removals from the blacklists.
Dr. Hajery says his staff of a dozen employees receives more than 500
suggestions a day from the public to block sites that the authorities have
missed. The requests are reviewed by the staff and about half of them are
ultimately added to the blacklist up to 7,000 URL's monthly. Many of the
sites forbidden on religious grounds are gleaned through this process, since the
staff members are primarily focused on ferreting out pornography sites, Dr.
Hajery said. The center also receives more than 100 requests a day to remove
specific sites from the blacklist many because they have been wrongfully
characterized by the SmartFilter software, he said.
Secure Computing disputes this, saying that all of its sites are reviewed by
people after being screened by the software.
Some sites become incidental victims to the government's broad snare. In
August 2000, the Saudi government decided to block access to all Yahoo
(news/quote) online clubs because many clubs were popular for pornography.
After the move elicited protest from people who use various Yahoo clubs to
communicate about everything from engineering to cooking, the center began
selectively unblocking nonpornographic Yahoo sites at users' requests.
Many Saudis support the government's ban on pornography. But sites banned
for political reasons incite protests. A 28-year- old claims assistant at Royal
and SunAlliance Insurance, who is a member of the Shiite minority in Saudi
Arabia, where the majority of Muslims are Sunni, said in an e- mail interview
that a Web site containing basic information about his village near the town of
Qatif had been blocked.
He compared Internet filtering to the Saudi national emblem, two crossed
swords below a date palm.
"You can look straight and eat from that palm tree as much as you want," he
said, "but if you ever try to look to your right or left side, there'll be a sword
waiting to chop off your head."
his $300 mill is now worth $66 mill (amzn 59 to 9, ebay 135 to 120 [2:1 split adjusted], dclk 60 to 9, insp 60 to 2, icge 35 to 1, pcln 54 to 4), 3 of 6 down 93% or more, 5 of 6 down 85% or more
his $2.05 billion in aol is now worth $1.4 billion (54 to 37)
his $5.8 billion in c is now worth $5.5 billion (51.7 to 49)
oops, there went $1.084 billion, not good, but not too big a deal on 8 billion, problem is the other half of his stuff is probably in equally bad shape, perhaps worse
so the rest of the bedouins are probably wondering when they're gonna see their 2 billion again and he's giving them a lot of happy talk
what he and they don't know is that the devastation they suffered in the internet garbage is going to be repeated across the board, i'll guess he'll be off all of the richest lists by 2005
too bad we won't have the pleasure of watching this pampered little weasel begging for his 10 mill back from nyc
I hope you don't do this as a means of punishing AOL. They bought out Time Warner which owns Roadrunner so it would be like trying to punish General Motors by selling your Chevy and buying a new Buick.
Incidentally, the stock has lost almost half it's value since last June so the Prince isn't exactly making hay on this deal. There's also a lot of foolish investors who either believe their AOL stock is still based primarily on the internet business or those who think it's just Time Magazine and Warner Brothers. AOL-Time Warner has their tenticles in practically every part of the telecommunications media - from internet service to films, music, cable tv, software, books, magazines and all cobranding off one another. If they collapse, the rest of those industries are in deep trouble. In that sense, the Prince is right. It's not going away anytime soon.
I'm an AT&T customer so they got me again!
I guess it's just BOHICA all around!!
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