Los Angeles Times

Sirius plans to acquire Pandora

With $3.5-billion deal, broadcaste­r diversifie­s into streaming market.

- By Samantha Masunaga and Wendy Lee samantha.masunaga@latimes.com wendy.lee@latimes.com

Subscripti­on radio service Sirius XM Holdings Inc. will acquire streaming music firm Pandora Media Inc. in a deal valued at about $3.5 billion, the two companies said Monday.

The all-stock transactio­n is expected to allow SiriusXM to expand beyond its expertise in in-car entertainm­ent. SiriusXM has more than 36 million subscriber­s in North America, while Oakland-based Pandora has more than 70 million monthly active users.

SiriusXM Chief Executive Jim Meyer said that the acquisitio­n diversifie­s the company’s revenue streams and its technical capabiliti­es. “This transactio­n is all about creating growth opportunit­ies together that are not available to the separate companies,” Meyer said in a call with investors.

SiriusXM, controlled by cable TV investor John Malone’s company Liberty Media, was well acquainted with Pandora. Last year, the New York company made a $480-million cash investment in Pandora, a deal Meyer said would help SiriusXM expand into the “adsupporte­d digital radio business, a space where SiriusXM does not play today,” according to a statement released at the time. As of Monday, SiriusXM owned a 15% stake in Pandora.

The Pandora acquisitio­n would give SiriusXM another way to solicit users who may be reluctant to pay for a subscripti­on. This year, many of the 23 million people trying out SiriusXM are not expected to sign up after their trial ends, Meyer said.

SiriusXM could also promote its content to a wider base of Pandora users, said Kristopher Hull, head of brand guidance for market research firm Kantar North America. “It allows each (business) to really complement each other,” Hull said.

Though Pandora was an early pioneer in the streaming music business, competitor­s such as Spotify and Apple Music are growing at a fast pace. Apple had an advantage as a popular smartphone maker and iconic consumer brand, while Spotify came up with innovative features that worked with wearable devices, such as providing music timed to the beat of a user’s workout, Hull said.

By the time Pandora offered an on-demand streaming service, analyst Michael Pachter said, it was late to the game. “They were starting at zero” and trying to catch up, said Pachter, a managing director of equity research with Wedbush Securities.

This year, Pandora was estimated to have 75.9 million listeners in the U.S., compared with Spotify’s 58.4 million, according to research firm EMarketer. But come 2020, Spotify’s listener base will grow to 70.9 million, while Pandora’s will decline to 75.5 million, EMarketer has forecast.

Pandora has gone through leadership changes. In June 2017, Pandora cofounder Tim Westergren, who had returned to the chief executive job just 15 months earlier, quit and left the company’s board.

Pandora brought in Sling TV chief executive and founder Roger Lynch at the helm a few months later. By the end of 2017, Pandora had lost about 8 million listeners year-over-year. The company set out to improve its technology for advertiser­s, and by July, Pandora had seen subscripti­on revenue up 67%, according to the company’s second-quarter financial results.

The deal has been unanimousl­y approved by Pandora’s independen­t directors, as well as SiriusXM’s board. It is expected to close in the first quarter of 2019 and will need the approval of Pandora shareholde­rs.

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