Spotify files to go public, eyes streaming growth despite losses
BY PTI1 March 2018 10:47 PM IST
PTI1 March 2018 10:47 PM IST
New York: Spotify today announced a long-awaited public listing, voicing confidence that its streaming model will keep reshaping the music industry but acknowledging that the company has yet to turn a profit. In its filing with US regulators, the Swedish platform that over the course of a decade has helped make streaming the most popular way to listen to music in parts of the world estimated the company's value to be as much as $23.4 billion.
In an unusual move, Spotify said it would list existing shares directly on the New York Stock Exchange rather than issue new shares, allowing its founders and investors to maintain control and avoiding the cost of hiring Wall Street underwriters.
The filing said that Spotify had 159 million monthly users including 71 million paying subscribers -- twice that of closest rival Apple Music, which the tech giant launched in 2015 to win a slice of the growing streaming market. "While streaming has changed the way many people access music, we believe there is an untapped global audience with significant growth potential," Spotify's 35-year-old CEO and co-founder Daniel Ek said in a statement.
Ek cited the model of Facebook, which has about two billion users, and YouTube as proof internet companies can reach "global scale."
The streaming service is available in 61 countries or territories and has room to expand even in mature markets, Ek said, citing data showing the average American listens to music for 32 hours each week.
Spotify in its filing said that the share listing could be worth $1 billion but cautioned that it was only offering the number informationally to meet regulatory rules.
The papers filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission offered the most detailed look yet at the finances of Spotify.
The company said that revenue jumped by more than 38 percent in 2017 from a year earlier to $4.99 billion. But the eye-popping rise of Spotify has yet to translate into a stable bottom line. The company said its net loss widened sharply last year to $1.51 billion.
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