The Asian Age

Spotify backs independen­t music labels

- HELENA SODERPALM and SOPHIE SASSARD

Music streaming service Spotify said on Thursday it has renewed a nine-year-old licensing deal with independen­t digital agency Merlin that has proven essential to its enduring appeal to dedicated music fans even as it has become more mainstream.

Merlin represents 20,000 independen­t record labels in 51 countries — around 12 per cent of the digital recorded music market — making it Spotify’s fourth largest partner after major labels Sony, Universal and Warner Music, the company said.

The agreement come weeks after Spotify reached a licensing deal with Universal that could make the streaming platform more attractive to its top-selling artists, including Taylor Swift, Adele, Lady Gaga, Coldplay and Kanye West — by letting them release albums exclusivel­y to paying premium users.

Spotify is the world’s top music streaming site, having doubled the number of its paying subscriber­s over the past two years to 50 million as of last month. Rival Apple Music counted 20 million paying subscriber­s as of last December.

Its stable includes British indie labels such as Beggars Group and Sub Pop through to classic German electronic music label !K7, Kobalt Music, which licenses the music of Prince, and Mad Decent, a US label which has distribute­d everything from African and Brazilian funk to artists like Outkast.

Spotify, which has yet to show a profit as it expands in markets worldwide and builds new offices in New York, is exploring a market listing in the US this year, banking sources say, confirming reports over the past year. But the music platform has resisted a traditiona­l initial public offering in favour of a direct share listing, a source with knowledge of the plan said, confirming an earlier report from the Wall Street Journal.

This means existing Spotify investors and employees with stock options would have their shares registered, enabling them to be traded freely, while the company would not be able to raise extra money or work with underwrite­rs to place new shares.

The company raised $526 million in its last funding round in 2015, giving it a valuation of around $8.5 billion at that time.

Spotify lost 173 million euros in 2015 according to the latest figures disclosed by its Luxembourg holding company, but recent deals with labels and the prospect of a stock market listing may mean its cash needs are less urgent.

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