In Praise of AOL
NEW YORK (TheStreet) -- Tim Armstrong gets no respect as CEO of AOL (AOL).
He came to his current job with the brightest of halos thanks to being head of sales at Google (GOOG). Expectations for him to turn around the company were so sky-high his struggles ended up seeming more disappointing than they ever would have were his last name Smith -- or Falco.
Of course, Armstrong did nothing to damp those expectations, so he must assume some responsibility for his apparent fall from grace.
However, it's time to really give Tim Armstrong his due. He has done a fantastic job over the last two years in turning around the fortunes of AOL for its shareholders.
Just think, almost two years ago, AOL was in the post-IPO doldrums. It had gone public in late 2009 in the low $20s. By August 2011, it seemed like the wheels had fallen off. The stock dropped as low as $10 after a poor earnings report. At that point, and still today, you couldn't find anyone bullish on AOL. Heck, you couldn't find anyone neutral on the stock. Back then, not only did it seem like earnings were slowing but you had the recent high-profile mass defections from TechCrunch and Arianna Huffington's apparent unhappiness after the acquisition of Huffington Post by AOL. The culture of AOL seemed to be a mess. You had warring factions of longtime AOLers, new propeller heads from Google who had followed Armstrong, and the other newbies from HuffPo who believed they had been doing just fine on their own before they got absorbed into AOL. (Many of these folks had been hoping HuffPo would IPO instead of getting acquired.) Investors seemed to want nothing to do with AOL. I remember some seemingly bright portfolio managers telling me AOL was a lost cause because they (the portfolio managers) never used it. Many couldn't believe there were still so many dial-up subscribers who continued to pay AOL full price for Internet access.Select the service that is right for you!
COMPARE ALL SERVICESAction Alerts PLUS
TRY IT FREEJim Cramer and Stephanie Link actively manage a real portfolio and reveal their money management tactics while giving advanced notice before every trade.
Product Features:
- $2.5+ million portfolio
- Large-cap and dividend focus
- Intraday trade alerts from Cramer
- Weekly roundups
Dividend Stock Advisor
TRY IT FREENew! $49.95/yr
Jim Cramer's protege, David Peltier, identifies the best of breed dividend stocks that will pay a reliable AND significant income stream.
Product Features:
- Diversified model portfolio of dividend stocks
- Alerts when market news affect the portfolio
- Bi-weekly updates with exact steps to take - BUY, HOLD, SELL
Stocks Under $10
TRY IT FREEDavid Peltier, uncovers low dollar stocks with extraordinary upside potential that are flying under Wall Street's radar.
Product Features:
- Model portfolio
- Stocks trading below $10
- Intraday trade alerts
- Weekly roundups
Real Money
TRY IT FREE24/7 market commentary from Jim Cramer and 20+ veteran Wall Street gurus. Get access to the latest trading ideas on stocks, options, and ETFs as well as a real-time forum to see the pros exchanging their investment ideas.
Product Features:
- Jim Cramer + 20 Wall Street pros
- Intraday commentary & news
- Real-time trading forum
- Actionable trade ideas
Real Money Pro
TRY IT FREEAll of Real Money, plus 15 more of Wall Street's sharpest minds delivering actionable trading ideas, a comprehensive look at the market, and fundamental and technical analysis.
Product Features:
- Real Money + Doug Kass + 15 more Wall Street Pros
- Intraday commentary & news
- Ultra-actionable trading ideas
Options Profits
TRY IT FREEOur options trading pros provide daily market commentary and over 100 monthly option trading ideas and strategies to help you become a well-seasoned trader.
Product Features:
- 100+ monthly options trading ideas
- Actionable options commentary & news
- Real-time trading community
- Options TV