- Stimulus Will Kick in Later this Year: President Obama
- Lender CIT Group Hires Premier Bankruptcy Adviser
- Government Selling Bank Stakes for Too Cheap: Panel
- Buffett's Top 3 Investment Rules for Average Americans
- Market Insider: Earnings Loom in the Week Ahead
- Bulls Get Summertime Blues, But It's Hot Fun for Bears
- As Banks Fail, Strong Institutions Become More Visible
- GM IPO in Second Quarter 2010 at the Earliest: CFO

- Merrill's McCann Seen as UBS Wealth Frontrunner
- Eric Schmidt on Government Scrutiny and Economic Recovery
- Market 360: The Week's Best & Worst
- Geek Squad V. Gizmodo
- Brandt: Google Chrome OS in the Post-PC Age
- Other People Are Weirder Than We Are
- Bank Failures: Is The Nightmare Over? (Video)
- California Here I Go? No.
- Roginsky: No More Mr. Nice Guy
- Commercial Conundrum
- Owner may open QE2 as floating hotel outside Dubai
- Australia seeks more info on detained Rio employee
- Planet Hollywood agrees to pay $500,000 fine in NV
- Job hunters swell Arkansas libraries
- Ecuadorean president demands new pipeline contract
- Cessna will return $10M to Wichita, Sedgwick Co.
- Arkansas sets sights on China rice trade
- St. Joseph Regional Medical Center's CEO to resign
- Welliver's Smorgasbord in Hagerstown to keep name
SUN VALLEY, Idaho - AOL, which is in the process of being spun off from Time Warner Inc, is reviewing assets it could sell or divest, but will likely keep its social networking site Bebo, CEO Tim Armstrong said.
Armstrong told Reuters on Thursday that Bebo still has "great value" and that it will be moved to a Ventures unit of the online company so that work can be done to improve the site. The move has raised speculation that AOL may want to sell Bebo, which has lagged in popularity behind other social media sites like Facebook and Twitter.
Speaking on the sidelines of the Sun Valley media and technology conference in Idaho, Armstrong said some other AOL assets are under review for possible sale or divestiture, but declined to give specifics.
The former Google Inc executive was appointed in March and is conducting a 100-day review of AOL operations. He is expected to present his strategy later this month.
AOL, whose properties include celebrity news website TMZ and the AIM messaging service, relies heavily on advertising revenue and has struggled with the decline of its Internet access business. Its share of the U.S. search market has dropped from nearly 12 percent three years ago to about 4 percent.
There are still many questions about how the business will maneuver through the advertising recession after it splits from Time Warner around the end of this year.
"More than any other player this year, everyone wants to know where they go from here post-Time Warner," said Standard & Poor's analyst Tuna Amobi.



