Billboard

Fred Davis & Joe Puthenveet­il

PARTNERS, THE RAINE GROUP

- BY ELIZABETH DILTS MARSHALL PHOTOGRAPH­ED BY PAUL STUART

THE MUSIC industry, like investment banking, is built largely on relationsh­ips, and Fred Davis and Joe Puthenveet­il have built their careers on being relationsh­ip brokers to both worlds.

Partners at merchant bank

The Raine Group, Davis — who is the son of music industry icon Clive Davis — and Puthenveet­il are two of the most influentia­l financial power brokers in the business. Since one of Raine’s earliest music deals advising

Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates-based Mubadala Investment on its acquisitio­n of EMI, it has advised on or invested in billions of dollars of transactio­ns. In recent years, the pair managed the $230 million sale of CD Baby’s digital operation to Downtown Music Holdings, helped Antonio “L.A.” Reid and Charles Goldstuck raise $75 million to launch the HitCo label and led SoundCloud’s $170 million emergency investment round in 2017, which included recruiting Singapore state fund Temasek to invest alongside it. (Concord acquired Hitco’s entire sound recording catalog and certain additional releases but not the label or brand name in 2022.)

In the past year alone, Davis says the partners have had a hand in more than $1 billion in transactio­ns, including advising Quality Control in its sale to HYBE America, advising private equity firm Francisco Partners in its acquisitio­n of Kobalt and helping Larry Jackson raise $1 billion in capital for his new venture, gamma.

Raine remains an investor in

SoundCloud and also helped create Firebird, a conglomera­te of independen­t music labels, publishers and artist management groups that develop and advise artists and help them with business opportunit­ies outside of music.

Puthenveet­il, a graduate of Georgetown University’s Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, joined Raine in 2010 and was a driving force behind the CD Baby sale and HitCo fundraisin­g, as well Raine’s investment­s in SoundCloud, concert/festival producer Blackbird Presents and promoter C3 Presents, which was sold to Live Nation. He sits on SoundCloud’s board of directors, with Davis, and on Blackbird’s board.

Fordham University School of Law-educated Davis (who launched his own law firm, Davis Shapiro & Lewit, before joining Raine) says one of the starkest trends shaping music today is that more money from more sources is flowing into the industry than ever before.

“When I was coming up as a music lawyer, there were maybe three, maybe four check writers,” he says. “The diversity of capital is so enormous in this industry right now. You have HYBE investing in Quality Control from South Korea. Eldridge Capital investing in gamma, along with Apple. Francisco Partners acquiring Kobalt. It’s strategic, private equity, high net worth, sovereign wealth.

“This is a new generation of capital investing in the music industry, “Davis adds. “We’ve never had an era like this ever.” Other investors that Raine has recently

advised include pro wrestling giant WWE on its $21 billion combinatio­n with Endeavor, Japan’s Softbank Group and the crypto exchange Binance.

For those who aren’t familiar with The Raine Group, please provide some background on the firm and its network of investors.

FRED DAVIS Raine has nine offices around the world and is very global by its DNA. The network we have now in private equity, sovereign wealth, high net worth, family offices and strategic investors is so complement­ary to the network a traditiona­l music lawyer has. We can collaborat­e and do what’s best for the client.

Describe what you do and how your services differ from, say, a music lawyer’s.

JOE PUTHENVEET­IL While

Fred and I specialize in music, our firm specialize­s in everything around media and technology. For a lot of our clients, a big part of why they work with us is to access unconventi­onal buyers and pools of capital. Being able

to leverage that global expertise and global investors, we’ve got a pretty unique and broad set of relationsh­ips across the firm.

How did HYBE America’s acquisitio­n of Quality Control happen?

DAVIS Last September, we took a trip to South Korea, set up a number of meetings with the best music companies in Korea and went there to uncover opportunit­ies. From that trip, we made the connection between HYBE and our preexistin­g client Quality Control. We work best with the client’s music lawyer. Quality Control is represente­d by Damian Granderson, with whom we work extremely well.

What does scaling Quality Control look like?

PUTHENVEET­IL Quality Control has taken its place in music and expanded it across culture to film and TV, sports, branding, and that’s how we think of the modern music industry. Talent is more than just their music. They are real brands and businesses. And the Quality Control team [COO Kevin “Coach K” Lee and CEO Pierre

“P” Thomas] understand­s that better than anyone. Coach and P have been public about their ambitions to make Quality Control one of the biggest businesses in hip-hop and broader Black culture. Having a partner that can help them do that with capital and expertise, they may scale further into film, TV and video games. DAVIS One of the visions that Coach and P have shared with us over the years is how they want to make Atlanta the home of hip-hop and street music the way Nashville is the home of country.

HYBE will help them accomplish that vision.

Are Quality Control and gamma similar in that they are both trying to take artists beyond music? What are your views on that?

PUTHENVEET­IL One hundred percent. They both approach it in slightly different ways, but fundamenta­lly, it’s driving at the same thesis and reality that artists build their careers through music, but build their brands and communitie­s through everything else they do. That is where we see the industry going more and more. Thinking back to our trip to Korea last September, they have fundamenta­lly understood that for a lot longer than we have in the U.S. On the investing side, we helped create a business called Firebird that has a similar belief and is partnering with the best labels, managers and publishing companies to help them expand beyond music and touring.

What is Firebird building?

DAVIS We invested in [as opposed to simply advising] Firebird. They are in the process of building a new-generation music company that will be a combinatio­n of managers and independen­t record labels as its core. They’ve done about a dozen transactio­ns and are well on their path to building a great new music company.

How is Firebird different from gamma, which also calls itself a new music company?

DAVIS Gamma will not be in the management business the same way Firebird is. There will be some elements of crossover, but the essence of each company will be different.

What role did Raine play in the launch of Larry Jackson’s gamma?

DAVIS We’ve known Larry for many years. Larry approached us with an idea many years ago of what he wanted to build. Our role was to find the capital to invest in gamma. We negotiated the Apple investment, and we sourced the Eldridge investment and negotiated the terms of the deal. Raine represente­d Chelsea Football Club, which Todd Boehly and Eldridge acquired. Through our partner Joe Ravitch’s relationsh­ip with Eldridge, we introduced Eldridge to Larry. [Eldridge is an investor in Billboard.] PUTHENVEET­IL We also helped [Jackson] translate his vision into a business plan and marketing materials and helped educate the investors on what this all means.

Why do you think investing in the music industry will be resilient even if market conditions worsen?

DAVIS Simple metrics of supply and demand. There is an incredible amount of capital that wants to

get into music. There are not that many great companies. That market dynamic will keep valuations high and opportunit­ies exciting. PUTHENVEET­IL The reason everyone is excited about music is that, structural­ly, it is healthy. Companies are growing, they’re profitable. There are a lot of opportunit­ies to invest, to acquire. When you look around at the broader landscape, sure, there are a lot of challengin­g sectors of the broader market. But everyone is still streaming music, everyone is still attending concerts. These companies are all still making record profits.

Historical­ly, periods of economic downturn trigger a risk-off approach to alternativ­e investment areas, which is what music is considered.

PUTHENVEET­IL Over the past six to nine months, we have gotten more calls from investors looking to enter this space than ever before.

Where do sovereign wealth funds want to invest in the music industry?

PUTHENVEET­IL Because of the growth of these funds, they have more people looking at spaces that might not have fallen in their purview before. That has resulted in GIC [in Singapore] investing in [Universal Music Group]. We brought Temasek into SoundCloud alongside us. We’ve seen sovereign funds in the Middle East looking at this space. In every process and transactio­n, we see more and more of that and expect it to continue. One of the early deals we did in the music space was advising Mubadala when they acquired EMI. At that time, very few people knew who Mubadala was, let alone expected them to buy that asset.

Globally, where do you see the opportunit­ies?

PUTHENVEET­IL All of the developing markets. That’s where streaming growth is, and the audiences are younger. But it’s the innovation we see coming out of those markets that is exciting.

Are there any pockets of vulnerabil­ity in the music industry?

DAVIS From a major label’s perspectiv­e, the area of vulnerabil­ity is the incredible growth of regional music. The percentage of regional music that non-major labels represent around the world in multiple territorie­s is at an all-time high, whether it’s K-pop in South Korea, Afrobeats in Africa or native music to France that’s not on major labels. This is a huge generation­al trend. From that perspectiv­e, it is a vulnerabil­ity for major labels.

 ?? ?? Puthenveet­il (left) and Davis photograph­ed March 21 at The Raine Group in London.
Puthenveet­il (left) and Davis photograph­ed March 21 at The Raine Group in London.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? From left: A photo of Davis’ sons, a memento of Raine’s representa­tion of Providence Equity in its deal with online music technology/instrument retailer Sweetwater, a family portrait with patriarch Clive Davis and a plaque commemorat­ing Raine’s work with Downtown Music to sell its publishing company to Concord.
From left: A photo of Davis’ sons, a memento of Raine’s representa­tion of Providence Equity in its deal with online music technology/instrument retailer Sweetwater, a family portrait with patriarch Clive Davis and a plaque commemorat­ing Raine’s work with Downtown Music to sell its publishing company to Concord.
 ?? ?? A plaque commemorat­ing Davis’ inclusion on Billboard’s 2022 Power List.
A plaque commemorat­ing Davis’ inclusion on Billboard’s 2022 Power List.
 ?? ?? Part of a collection of Nike Air Jordans that Puthenveet­il’s wife gifted him.
Part of a collection of Nike Air Jordans that Puthenveet­il’s wife gifted him.

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