Common Music Group stated Wednesday it might promote half its stake in Spotify and double its share buyback program after reporting {that a} weaker U.S. greenback suppressed first-quarter earnings.
UMG stated the proceeds from the stake discount will likely be used for buybacks and shared with artists.
The transfer comes three weeks after activist investor Invoice. Ackman unilaterally made a $64 billion bid for UMG, claiming the market was underfilled. It values Spotify inventory at €2.7 billion.
Mr. Ackman proposed promoting his stake and utilizing the proceeds of 1.5 billion euros as a part of the money consideration for the acquisition.
UMG’s board has now acted independently, approving the sale by itself phrases somewhat than returning the proceeds on to shareholders, as Mr. Ackman had advocated.
This resolution permits UMG to abide by the “Taylor Swift Clause.” The clause is a promise Taylor Swift made when she re-signed her contract with the label in 2018, underneath which the proceeds from the sale of her Spotify inventory could be shared with all artists on a non-recoverable foundation.
UMG additionally stated it plans to launch an extra 500 million euros in share buybacks, topic to shareholder approval on the annual basic assembly, doubling the entire quantity approved for buybacks.
The board stated it views the inventory as undervalued relative to the corporate’s efficiency and prospects.
First-quarter income was 2.9 billion euros ($3.4 billion), flat on a reported year-over-year foundation however up 8.1% at fixed foreign money.
Adjusted earnings earlier than curiosity, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) decreased by 3.8% to €636 million, however elevated by 3.9% at fixed foreign money.
High sellers for the quarter included soundtracks by BTS, Taylor Swift, Olivia Dean, Morgan Wallen and Okay-Pop Demon Hunters, the corporate stated.
