Warner Music narrows its losses on brisk digital sales
The company's digital revenues jumped 39.3% to $156 million, surpassing analyst expectations in the face of the industry's rocky transition to online distribution.
Strong international sales and higher digital music revenue narrowed losses for Warner Music Group Corp. in the fiscal third quarter, surpassing analyst expectations in the face of the industry's rocky transition to digital distribution.
The music company whose artists include rock bands R.E.M and Disturbed, and pop star Katy Perry, reported a net loss of $9 million, or 6 cents a share, in the three months ended June 30, compared with a loss of $17 million, or 12 cents, in the same period last year.
Revenue rose 5.5% to $848 million, surpassing the $792.2-million average estimate of analysts polled by Bloomberg. Accounting for the weak dollar, revenue actually fell 1.1%.
Music earnings: An article in Friday's Business section about earnings for Warner Music Group identified Katy Perry as a Warner Music recording artist. Her songs are published by a Warner Music unit, but her albums are released by Capitol Records, a unit of EMI Group.
"Warner Music seems well-positioned to continue to drive aggressive growth in digital revenue," said Tuna Amobi, an analyst at Standard & Poor's. "They seem to be leading the industry in terms of making digital partners."
Warner's digital revenue jumped 39.3% to $156 million, which comprised 22.7% of the company's $686 million in total recorded music revenue. Sales of physical CDs fell 5% and licensing revenue rose 27%.
The New York-based company was acquired by a group of private equity investors in 2004 from Time Warner Inc. It is the third-largest of the four major record labels, but ranks second in market share for digital album sales, according to Nielsen SoundScan.
Warner Music Chairman and Chief Executive Edgar Bronfman Jr. credited the company's strategy of offering special bundles of content online -- such as a collection of singles and extended plays by folk rock singer-songwriter Jason Mraz on iTunes -- and pursuing new distribution models through deals with online retailer Amazon.com Inc., music subscription service Napster Inc., and mobile phone maker Nokia.
"The economics I think are extremely favorable to us and to the industry generally," Bronfman said in a conference call with analysts, referring to distributing Warner's music on cellphones. He said distributing music over cellphones would allow Warner to reach "markets that we've never been able to deal in before," such as India and China.
Although Bronfman acknowledged the growing video game market offered revenue opportunities for music companies, he blasted game producers for paying "paltry" fees and threatened to withhold licensing songs to them unless they paid more.
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