Toronto Star

Spotify will follow in giants’ footsteps

Like Facebook and Google, founders opt for public listing without IPO to keep control

- LUCAS SHAW BLOOMBERG

LOS ANGELES— Spotify’s co-founders are taking a page from the GoogleFace­book playbook, with plans to maintain control over the music service after its stock listing by holding shares with super-voting power, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.

Chief executive officer Daniel Ek and vice-chair Martin Lorentzon own a class of stock that assures their hold on the company after the shares begin trading, said the people, who asked not to be identified because the terms aren’t public. Another class will be tradable by investors.

That means public investors will be able to own part of the world’s largest paid music service in the next couple of months, but won’t have much say about its future. Years after going public, some of the biggest technology companies, including Google parent Alphabet Inc. and Facebook Inc., remain under the control of founders who hold shares with supervotin­g rights. Company founders employ socalled dual-class structures to take advantage of the perks of being publicly traded without surrenderi­ng control. Such owners can make acquisitio­ns that dilute their economic interest without loosing their grip.

Ek has looked to such companies for direction. He invited Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg to his wedding and has publicly praised Snap Inc.’s leadership, which gave its investors no voting rights in its initial public offering last March.

Robert Jackson Jr., a commission­er at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, has criticized dualclass structures as unfair, and said the shares should eventually become normal.

Ek and Lorentzon have already convinced shareholde­rs to embrace their unconventi­onal route to the public market. Spotify, based in Stockholm, will skip an initial public offering, the process by which companies raise money by selling shares that may be traded on public markets. Instead, current Spotify investors will be allowed to start selling shares on the public market.

The process is risky. The company and its bankers skipped the traditiona­l road show that precedes an IPO and may have less informatio­n about how potential investors will value the company.

“The biggest unknown is how the direct listing will work,” Rohit Kulkarni, an analyst with SharesPost, said in an interview. “There is no formal road show. There is no clear setting the stage or matching supply with demand.”

Investors have valued Spotify at up to $20 billion (U.S.) in private trades over the past several months, making the company one of the most valuable startups in the world, the people said. The secondary market was very active during the second half of last year, but has slowed as the company’s public debut nears.

The music service sold a minority stake to Chinese internet giant Tencent Holdings Inc. late last year.

Spotify plans to list shares at the end of March or early April, one of the people said. The company has lifted the music industry out of a 15-year decline by convincing more than 70 million people to pay for a monthly music subscripti­on.

 ??  ?? Shortly, Spotify investors can start selling shares on the public market.
Shortly, Spotify investors can start selling shares on the public market.

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