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Chances are, if you listen to music these days, you're a streamer. Streaming now makes up roughly 75% of U.S. music industry revenues, and the streaming industry is projected to reach $9.9 billion in global revenue this year, according to Statista. The No. 1 market for streaming is, unsurprisingly, the U.S., with $4.2 billion, well ahead of the second-largest market, China, which is estimated to generate roughly $743 million in streaming revenue this year.
And while Swedish music streamer Spotify (NYSE: SPOT) made waves when it went public in April of this year, a new global entrant just made its public debut in December: Tencent Music Entertainment (NYSE: TME). While Spotify opened to much fanfare and shares surged to almost $199 this past summer, its stock has since fallen to $120 per share, below its IPO price of $132.
Tencent Music, after much delay, finally decided to go public amid today's tumultuous markets, pricing its IPO at the bottom of the $13-$15-per-share range, and raising only $1.1 billion, down from its previous goal of $4 billion.
So now that both streaming giants are up and running in the public markets, which is the better buy? Here are a few reasons I'd take Tencent Music over Spotify all day long.
Much better financials
On just about every relevant measure, Tencent Music beats Spotify:
First 9 Months of 2018 | Tencent Music | Spotify |
---|---|---|
Revenue (USD millions) | $1,978 | $3,764 |
Revenue growth over first 9 months of 2017 | 83.7% | 28% |
Operating income (loss) | 438 | (137) |
MAUs (millions) | 880 | 191 |
Paying members (millions) | 34.8 | 87 |
Data source: Tencent Music Entertainment F-1, Spotify third-quarter press release. MAUs = monthly active users.
It's pretty hard to look at these numbers and make any sort of case for Spotify over Tencent Music. While Spotify does currently generate almost twice the revenue of Tencent Music, Tencent Music is growing three times as fast, has over four times the monthly active users, and also has a bigger opportunity to get more of its users to pay in the future (with a lower percentage of monthly active users as paying members).
Lower artist payments make Tencent Music more profitable
The key ingredient to Tencent Music's profitability? It doesn't have to pay its artists as much...because a huge amount of its revenue isn't tied to professional music.
While many Chinese citizens aren't willing to pay much (or at all) for streaming services, a key piece to the Tencent Music story is the vibrant Chinese online karaoke community, whereby viewers tip amateur singers over their smartphones. Tencent Music keeps part of the payment.