THE LONG TENOR
A weekly column on markets, history, and consequence — by Rosalind Feldman.
The Long Lifecycle of a Bad Acquisition: Twenty-Three Years of Time Warner / AOL
What does it actually take to unwind the largest mistake in M&A history? A 2026 retrospective on a deal we still haven't finished cleaning up — and what its survival pattern tells us about the next mega-merger to fail.
18 MIN READ · M&A · HISTORY · PAID — UNLOCK BELOW
In January 2000, AOL announced it would acquire Time Warner in an all-stock transaction valued at $164 billion. By any measure available to a contemporary observer, this was the largest corporate combination ever attempted. The press releases used the word "transformational" without irony. The proxy statements ran to 484 pages.
The deal closed in January 2001. Within twenty-four months, the combined company had written down $99 billion of goodwill — at the time the largest single accounting impairment in American corporate history. Within seven years, the AOL division had been spun off as an independent company at a fraction of its purchase price. Within twenty-three years — by 2024 — the last operational asset traceable to the original AOL footprint had been sold for parts to a private equity consortium I will name shortly.
The conventional narrative treats this as a story about a moment: the dot-com peak, the credulity of legacy-media executives, the hubris of internet-economy valuations. That narrative is not wrong. It is, however, dramatically incomplete. The interesting question is not why the deal happened. It is why it took twenty-three years to fully unwind, and what the structural impediments to unwinding tell us about the deals being announced today.
I have spent the last four months working through the SEC filings of every Time Warner / AOL successor entity — a population of fourteen distinct legal vehicles that emerged from the original combined company between 2003 and 2024 — and what is striking is the consistency of the pattern. The pieces did not unwind randomly. They unwound in a specific order driven by three factors that turn out to be present in every mega-merger failure since: contractual lock-ups inherited from the original transaction, executive compensation structures that incentivize delay, and the asymmetry between board-level reputational risk and shareholder-level economic loss.
The remaining fourteen sections of this essay — the deal-by-deal table of the fourteen successor entities, the contractual lock-up analysis, and the implications for the four mega-mergers announced in 2024–2025 — are for paid subscribers.
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ASSET MGRS · BANKS · LAW FIRMSRosalind Feldman is the writer of The Long Tenor, a weekly column on markets, business history, and consequence. Previously a columnist at Bloomberg Opinion (2018–2024) and a senior editor at the Financial Times (2014–2018). Her academic background is in economic history; she holds a DPhil from Oxford. The Long Tenor has been published every Monday since January 2020 and is read by analysts and PMs at most major US and UK asset managers. The publication is independent and accepts no advertising or sponsored content.
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