Universal Music dances to $55 billion in electric stock market debut


  • Shares surge almost 40% in early trade
  • Biggest European listing of the year
  • Listing is a coup for Amsterdam exchange

AMSTERDAM, Sept 21 (Reuters) – Universal Music Group’s (UMG.AS) shares leapt more than a third in their stock market debut on Tuesday as investors bet a boom in music streaming still has a long way to run.

The world’s biggest music label, which represents musicians and song catalogues from Billie Eilish to The Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan, saw its market value leap to 47 billion euros ($55 billion) in Europe’s largest listing of the year.

The company was spun off by France’s Vivendi (VIV.PA), which handed a 60% stake in Universal to its shareholders. Vivendi saw its market value drop by two thirds to about 12 billion euros, according to Refinitiv data, as it refocuses on other media assets such as pay TV brand Canal+.

Big winners from the Amsterdam listing include U.S. hedge fund billionaire William Ackman and China’s Tencent (0700.HK), alongside Vivendi’s controlling shareholder Vincent Bollore, who are retaining large slices of Universal. read more

Universal Chairman and CEO Lucian Grainge will also get bonuses linked to the listing that a source close to the company said would amount to at least $140 million.

Universal’s shares were trading at 24.97 euros by mid-session trading, up around 35% from their reference price of 18.50 euros. Shares in Bollore (BOLL.PA), which holds 27% of Vivendi, were up 2.4%, while the Amsterdam-listed shares of Ackman’s Pershing (PSH.AS) were up 4%.

At that price, Universal – the biggest of the “big three” record labels – trades at a 25% premium to its only listed competitor, Warner Music (WMG.O), said analyst Matti Littunen of Bernstein. Both compete with Sony Music .

“No sign of a European discount here,” Littunen said in a note, adding that the stock’s performance would reduce pressure to seek a dual U.S. listing for Universal, which is based in Hilversum, Netherlands, but has headquarters in Santa Monica, California.

The strong debut is also a vindication for Ackman, who was forced into an embarrassing U-turn after U.S. regulators blocked his plans to invest into Universal via his special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) in July.

Ackman, whose grandfather was a songwriter, instead opted to take a 10% stake via his main Pershing Square hedge fund, which is now sitting on a paper gain of more than 30%.

The logo of Universal Music Group (UMG) is seen at a building in Zurich, Switzerland July 20, 2021. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann/File Photo

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BEATLES TO BIEBER

Amid the streaming boom, Universal – whose other hit singers and catalogues include Justin Bieber and The Beatles – hopes to build on deals with ad-supported sites such as TikTok and YouTube as well as streamers led by Spotify.

“I believe that we’re only at the beginning of the next wave of growth as music subscription and ad-supported consumption is scaling globally and has a long runaway ahead,” Grainge told Reuters.

Part of Universal’s business…



Read More: Universal Music dances to $55 billion in electric stock market debut

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