Morning Report: As expected, Spotify and Tencent have exchanged stakes in each others’ respective music businesses. Spotify needed the leg up.
Spotify, the popular music streaming business, has linked arms with Tencent’s Tencent Music Entertainment, exchanging a stake of itself for a piece of the latter streaming business. The deal comes amidst a myriad of stories indicating that Spotify will go public next year, perhaps in a so-called direct listing.
Follow Crunchbase News on Twitter & Facebook
(For more on why Spotify needs to go public as quickly as it can, head here.)
But the deal has more to it than establishing a partnership between two companies. There’s cash at play, something that is important to the unprofitable Spotify. Here’s Music Business Worldwide (MBW) with the pertinent riff:
The equity arrangement is believed to result in Tencent Music Entertainment Group and Spotify both acquiring 10% in each other’s companies.
It’s understood that Tencent Music will pass Spotify a chunk of cash to account for the different valuations of their businesses.
The same article reports that the Tencent music business is worth $10 billion and Spotify $15 billion. The latter valuation is far higher than what we have listed on our Unicorn Leaderboard. The MBW-sourced figure leans on “recent private trades.”
Taking the $15 billion as fact for now, if the firms swapped stakes with Tencent Music Entertainment making up the delta with cash, the currency component could be worth $500 million. That’s real money, and its cash Spotify likely needs.
From The Crunchbase Daily:
Bitcoin’s dramatic rise takes pause
- After spiking north of $19,000 on some exchanges, bitcoin’s upward swing has paused. Following dramatic gains in recent days, the price of bitcoin has fallen around one percent in the last day, according to CoinMarketCap. Bitcoin is worth $15,650 as the Coinbase app spikes on the App Store and altcoins surpass the valuations of some of the biggest unicorns.
Chinese next-gen car companies raise huge rounds
- China-based companies working on autonomous and electric vehicle projects are raising increasingly enormous sums from investors as those market categories mature, Crunchbase News reports. Funding for companies in the cohort has risen around 50 percent this year.
Uber strikes another overseas partnership
- Uber, the American ridesharing giant, will sell 51 percent of its Singapore-based operations to a local player for $295 million. Uber previously sold its Chinese operations. The scandal-ridden company has had an unsettled 2017, including news that its losses recently expanded from prior declines.
Stay up to date with recent funding rounds, acquisitions, and more with the Crunchbase Daily.
67.1K Followers