Welcome to Music Enterprise Worldwide’s weekly round-up – the place we be certain you caught the 5 greatest tales to hit our headlines over the previous seven days. MBW’s round-up is supported by Centtrip, which helps over 500 of the world’s best-selling artists maximize their earnings and cut back their touring prices.
The enterprise of streaming dominated developments within the music business this week, with Common Music Group COO and CFO Boyd Muir telling an viewers at a Morgan Stanley convention that we are able to count on to see the primary of the brand new superfan-oriented ‘Tremendous-Premium‘ subscription tiers seem in 2025.
In the meantime, Amazon Music revealed this week that it’s following in Spotify‘s footsteps and bundling audiobooks (from its Audible service) into its music subscriptions. Nonetheless, not like with Spotify’s bundling, Amazon’s transfer gained’t outcome in decrease mechanical royalty payouts for songwriters.
Following a stellar Q3 earnings report, Spotify‘s inventory value soared to a file excessive, giving the corporate a market cap of $92 billion. Co-founders Daniel Ek and Martin Lorentzon took the chance to money out big-time, promoting a mixed $420 million in shares in November alone.
That windfall received MBW founder Tim Ingham pondering whether or not it’s time for Common Music Group to promote its stake in Spotify, now value $3 billion.
In a separate column, Ingham famous that, based on Spotify’s Q3 outcomes (and This autumn forecast), the corporate expects to submit a USD $1.5 billion annual working revenue on the shut of this 12 months, and advised that “the long-argued premise that Spotify must claw again margin from songwriters – or certainly any music rightsholder – so as to survive is now palpably false”.
Lastly, Warner Music Group‘s calendar Q3 earnings, launched this week, confirmed 10.6% YoY progress in subscription streaming revenues.
Right here’s what occurred this week…
1) ‘SUPER-PREMIUM’ MUSIC SUBSCRIPTION TIERS COMING IN 2025, AND 3 OTHER THINGS WE LEARNED FROM UNIVERSAL MUSIC’S BOYD MUIR AT THE MORGAN STANLEY CONFERENCE
Boyd Muir, Chief Working Officer and Chief Monetary Officer at Common Music Group, expects “super-premium” subscription tiers to begin showing in 2025 – and he expects that between 20% and 30% of paying music subscribers will ultimately enroll.
Subsequent 12 months, “you’ll see the primary of these choices,” Muir informed an viewers at Morgan Stanley’s European Tech, Media and Telecom Convention in Barcelona this week.
“We’re speaking to all of the platforms about what their premium providing would possibly seem like. They’re all a bit totally different,” Muir added.
“The sorts of issues we’re speaking about are early launch of music, issues like premier occasions round music, issues like chat room[s] between artist and fan, collectibles…”
2) AMAZON MUSIC TO BUNDLE AUDIOBOOKS FROM AUDIBLE – AND UNLIKE SPOTIFY’S BUNDLING MOVE, PUBLISHERS SAY IT WON’T DECREASE REVENUE FOR SONGWRITERS
Spotify’s rival, Amazon Music, has grow to be the most recent music streaming service to bundle audiobooks with its Premium subscription.
In a problem to Spotify’s audiobook service, Amazon Music Limitless subscribers within the US, UK, and Canada can now hear to at least one audiobook a month from Amazon-owned audiobook service Audible. The retail and tech large acquired Audible for $300 million in 2008.
The NMPA has already responded to the information, and the distinction between the group’s response to Amazon Music’s transfer and its response to Spotify’s transfer earlier this 12 months is hanging.
“We count on this new Amazon bundle won’t lower income for songwriters,” NMPA President and CEO David Israelite mentioned. “Not like Spotify, Amazon is taking a look at music creators as enterprise companions and looking for to have a deal in place earlier than the primary spherical of royalty funds…”
3) UNIVERSAL MUSIC GROUP’S STAKE IN SPOTIFY IS NOW WORTH $3 BILLION. IS IT TIME TO SELL?
Common Music Group and its traders have good purpose to really feel conflicted about Spotify‘s hockey-stick worth progress in 2024.
In spite of everything, UMG, the world’s largest music rightsholder, was value thrice as a lot as SPOT in market cap phrases as just lately as the top of 2022.
But as issues stand right now, in public valuation phrases anyway, Spotify is king of the music enterprise.
Having overtaken UMG’s public valuation this summer time, Spotify – with a $92 billion market cap right now – is at present value roughly double Common’s valuation on the Amsterdam Euronext…
4) SPOTIFY GAINS PROFITABILITY… BUT LOSES THE ARGUMENT.
Who’s received the larger consumer base: Netflix or Spotify?
Proper now, there’s no contest: it’s Spotify.
In keeping with its newly-released Q3 outcomes, Daniel Ek‘s inexperienced machine was accessed by 640 million MAUs (month-to-month lively customers) within the quarter to finish of September.
Netflix’s official consumer base hit 282.7 million ‘members’ in the identical interval. As well as, Netflix just lately confirmed it now has 70 million individuals signed as much as its ‘ad-supported’ tier, which launched two years in the past.
The large distinction?
All of Netflix’s customers are paying one thing…
5) WARNER MUSIC ACHIEVES FOURTH STRAIGHT QUARTER OF DOUBLE-DIGIT SUBSCRIPTION STREAMING GROWTH AS CALENDAR Q3 REVENUES HIT $1.63BN
There have been loads of questions in regards to the progress trajectory of streaming revenues at main music firms this 12 months.
Warner Music Group has persistently offered some of the optimistic responses.
On November 21, WMG introduced its fiscal This autumn (calendar Q3) outcomes. The corporate has posted double-digit YoY recorded subscription streaming progress on a normalized foundation for the fourth quarter in a row.
In calendar Q3 (WMG’s fiscal This autumn), the corporate’s subscription streaming revenues grew 10.6% YoY on a normalized fixed foreign money foundation to $645 million…
MBW’s Weekly Spherical-Up is supported by Centtrip, which helps over 500 of the world’s best-selling artists maximise their earnings and cut back their touring prices.Music Enterprise Worldwide