Billboard

RECESSION? WHAT RECESSION?

Upbeat third-quarter results defied a mostly bleak earnings season for other sectors

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MUSIC COMPANIES’ quarterly results in October and November were a bright spot amid a mostly bleak earnings season. High inflation, rising interest rates and the chance of a recession presented a triple-whammy to most sectors — particular­ly tech and retail — but in the music industry, those macroecono­mic threats weren’t enough to dampen consumer demand and investors’ confidence.

“While the broader economy is facing challenges, the music industry as a whole remains healthy,” says Golnar Khosrowsha­hi, founder and CEO of Reservoir Media, which raised its full-fiscal-year forecast by 11% for both revenue and adjusted earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortizati­on (EBITDA).

So what worked in music companies’ favor? In short, more people are going to concerts and buying streaming subscripti­ons, and revenues from those sectors helped bolster quarterly results for nearly every publicly listed music company.

DIVERSIFIC­ATION = FORTIFICAT­ION

The major labels, which have a piece of the market in nearly every segment of the music industry, all reported quarterly revenue gains over the third quarter last year, ranging from 16% at Warner Music Group to 6% at Sony Music Entertainm­ent. On Universal Music Group’s third-quarter call, chairman/CEO Lucian Grainge attributed the company’s 13.3% third-quarter revenue gains to UMG’s diversific­ation strategy. While ad-supported streaming revenue slowed significan­tly, only growing 5.2% (from last year’s 15.6% growth), licensing and other revenues rose by 30% due to an $84.2 million increase in touring revenue from Latin American, European and Asian markets where UMG is in that business. Merchandis­ing and other revenue related to those tours grew by over 100% to almost $199 million. “We are better positioned to navigate the inevitable ebbs and flows of revenue of any particular business, as well as to weather any macroecono­mic headwinds,” said Grainge.

LIVE’S ALIVE AGAIN

Live Nation Entertainm­ent had its biggest summer concert season ever, reporting that more than 44 million fans attended 11,000 events in the third quarter, as attendance for stadium shows tripled to nearly 9 million. Companywid­e, Live Nation reported $6.2 billion in quarterly revenue, up nearly 67% from the last-comparable quarter, which for it was the third quarter of 2019.

STREAMING’S STILL STRONG

On a call with investors, an analyst asked Sony deputy president/ CFO Hiroki Totoki what risks Sony Music Entertainm­ent faces.

His reply: “Streaming is very successful, and we don’t really have that much of a concern.” Spotify’s third-quarter results confirm that. Revenue rose 12% to roughly $3.2 billion at a constant currency on a 13% uptick in subscripti­on revenue from more than 195 million subscriber­s — 1 million more than the company targeted. It’s also worth noting that although Totoki said on the call that Sony is “taking steps to prepare for further deteriorat­ion... in each of our businesses,” the company raised its revenue and operating income targets for the full fiscal year by $9.8 billion and $1.9 billion, respective­ly (at Sony’s assumed exchange rate for the second half of the fiscal year). —ELIZABETH DILTS MARSHALL

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