Another giant of digital music is about to float on the stock exchange in the United States.
Tencent Music Entertainment (TME), which is majority-owned by massive Chinese corporation Tencent, is reportedly readying an application for an IPO in the US this week.
Sources suggest that TME will file an IPO application with the US Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday (July 6) – officially beginning the firm’s listing process.
The IPO’s lead underwriters are said to be Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley.
A conservative pricing range being offered by US investment banks for TME is apparently $29bn to $31bn, which has largely been benchmarked against Spotify.
Three months on from floating on the New York Stock Exchange (April 3), Spotify currently boasts a market cap of $29.6bn.
According to fiscal filings cited by Sina, Tencent Music posted revenues of nearly RMB 5bn ($753m) in 2016, with a net profit of nearly RMB 600m ($91m).
In 2017, the company’s net profit grew considerably to exceed RMB 1.88bn ($283m).
It is now expected that TME’s revenues will exceed RMB 17bn ($2.6bn) in 2018.
Tencent Music owns digital music services QQ Music, Kuwo and KuGou in China.
China entered the Top 10 biggest recorded music markets last year.
The nation generated $292.3m for labels and artists, according to IFPI figures, up 35.3% on the prior year.
A Sony/ATV spokesperson told MBW in a statement: “If at any time the company’s equity in Tencent Music Entertainment is monetized our songwriters will share the benefits of it, which is our customary practice.”
MBW understands that Sony/ATV managed to get hold of equity in China Music Corp (CMC), before Tencent acquired a majority stake in the then-$2.7bn-valued company in 2016.
As part of that merger, TME took control of Kuwo and KuGou.
(All RMB currency conversions above completed at current RMB-USD rates.)Music ComeOn