EMI (recorded music division) for sale?
EMI (recorded music division) for sale?
EMI mulls music division spin-off
James Robinson and Richard Wachman
Sunday February 18, 2007
The Observer
EMI may sell or demerge its recorded music division as part of a radical overhaul of the business designed to reverse falling profits. Sources close to the company, which has issued two profit warnings in a month, say the plan is being given serious consideration by the board as it attempts to cut costs and boost its share price.
A sale would leave EMI with its more profitable music publishing arm, which owns the copyright to more than 1 million songs recorded by artists including Sting, Aerosmith and Jay-Z.
The recorded music arm has been hit by disappointing CD sales in the US, and the growth of downloading. Although most major record companies have embraced digital sales, revenues are not expected to compensate for a fall in CD sales for many years.
Chief executive Eric Nicoli, who is now fighting for his job, blamed its poor performance for the warnings, the second of which prompted a 12 per cent fall in its share price last week.
The recorded music business can be lucrative but it is notoriously unpredictable. EMI had pinned its hopes on new releases from Robbie Williams and Janet Jackson, but they did not sell as well as it expected. The fact that the division's sale is under serious consideration shows the extent of the group's problems.
It forms part of a four-point plan to reverse falling profits at the group, which was announced last month following a first profit warning. Nicoli fired Alain Levy as head of recorded music following the warning and stepped into the role himself, although some EMI shareholders questioned the wisdom of the move.
Sources claim the plan, designed to save £110m a year, is more far-reaching than the City realises.It also includes dramatically reducing the size of its US business, pulling out of foreign markets and pursuing a more aggressive digital strategy. The business will be refocused to reflect new industry realities, according to sources.
Permira made a 320p-per-share offer for EMI last summer. The offer was rejected after Nicoli claimed the business was poised for growth, but EMI's shares closed at 221p on Friday.
Shareholders are expected to tell EMI's new chairman, John Gildersleeve, to find a new chief executive when they meet him in the coming weeks.
James Robinson and Richard Wachman
Sunday February 18, 2007
The Observer
EMI may sell or demerge its recorded music division as part of a radical overhaul of the business designed to reverse falling profits. Sources close to the company, which has issued two profit warnings in a month, say the plan is being given serious consideration by the board as it attempts to cut costs and boost its share price.
A sale would leave EMI with its more profitable music publishing arm, which owns the copyright to more than 1 million songs recorded by artists including Sting, Aerosmith and Jay-Z.
The recorded music arm has been hit by disappointing CD sales in the US, and the growth of downloading. Although most major record companies have embraced digital sales, revenues are not expected to compensate for a fall in CD sales for many years.
Chief executive Eric Nicoli, who is now fighting for his job, blamed its poor performance for the warnings, the second of which prompted a 12 per cent fall in its share price last week.
The recorded music business can be lucrative but it is notoriously unpredictable. EMI had pinned its hopes on new releases from Robbie Williams and Janet Jackson, but they did not sell as well as it expected. The fact that the division's sale is under serious consideration shows the extent of the group's problems.
It forms part of a four-point plan to reverse falling profits at the group, which was announced last month following a first profit warning. Nicoli fired Alain Levy as head of recorded music following the warning and stepped into the role himself, although some EMI shareholders questioned the wisdom of the move.
Sources claim the plan, designed to save £110m a year, is more far-reaching than the City realises.It also includes dramatically reducing the size of its US business, pulling out of foreign markets and pursuing a more aggressive digital strategy. The business will be refocused to reflect new industry realities, according to sources.
Permira made a 320p-per-share offer for EMI last summer. The offer was rejected after Nicoli claimed the business was poised for growth, but EMI's shares closed at 221p on Friday.
Shareholders are expected to tell EMI's new chairman, John Gildersleeve, to find a new chief executive when they meet him in the coming weeks.
In the eyes of those lovers of perfection, a work is never finished—a word that for them has no sense—but abandoned....(Paul Valéry)
EMI has a long and distinguished history and holds a special place in my heart.
In order of importance for me, there’s Parlophone, an EMI division and the original UK label for the Beatles.
George Martin started producing Classical records for EMI and then moved into comedy records with the “Goons: featuring Peter Sellers and then found Brian Epstein hawking the Beatles to him after being turned down by Decca Records.
The US distributor for the Beatles was another EMI owned concern namely Capital Records which besides the Beatles had a few lesser known artists like Sinatra and the Beach Boys
Obviously EMI is famous for producing Classical Recordings but with vinyl now considered to be ancient media and CDs soon to follow, if you don’t have a computer to download to, you better start learning how to play an instrument if you want to hear music
In order of importance for me, there’s Parlophone, an EMI division and the original UK label for the Beatles.
George Martin started producing Classical records for EMI and then moved into comedy records with the “Goons: featuring Peter Sellers and then found Brian Epstein hawking the Beatles to him after being turned down by Decca Records.
The US distributor for the Beatles was another EMI owned concern namely Capital Records which besides the Beatles had a few lesser known artists like Sinatra and the Beach Boys
Obviously EMI is famous for producing Classical Recordings but with vinyl now considered to be ancient media and CDs soon to follow, if you don’t have a computer to download to, you better start learning how to play an instrument if you want to hear music
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Uhmmm, Ted, that's Capitol Records, not Capital Records.Ted wrote: The US distributor for the Beatles was another EMI owned concern namely Capital Records which besides the Beatles had a few lesser known artists like Sinatra and the Beach Boys
I am still unclear as to exactly what is up for sale. Is it just their existing stock of classical releases with the masters, or is it also the contracts with their current roster of classical artists, or does it include other artists as well?
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Why don't we all pool our monetary resources, become the owners of the entire EMI recording catalogue (classical only). I would LOVE to be a CEO of such a company. I might even be compelled to do it for no fee, but that's negotiable! If EMI—"The Greatest Recording Organisation in the World"—were suddenly to fade into oblivion, just think of what a loss this would be to the music world. God only knows what the fate of the merger of RCA/Sony Classical [Columbia/CBS] is going to be in the future. Who would have ever thought two great competitors would merge as they did? It's nice that it happened as it allowed both companies to continue to operate. And think UNIVERSAL with DGG, Decca/London and Philips now under one blanket.
I probably have more EMI product on my shelves than any other single label, both LP and CD. RCA Victor would be next, and Sony/Columbia after that. They are all great catalogues. As I've said so many times, I'm glad I've got what I've got. It's been a treasure trove my whole life time.
I probably have more EMI product on my shelves than any other single label, both LP and CD. RCA Victor would be next, and Sony/Columbia after that. They are all great catalogues. As I've said so many times, I'm glad I've got what I've got. It's been a treasure trove my whole life time.
Lance G. Hill
Editor-in-Chief
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When she started to play, Mr. Steinway came down and personally
rubbed his name off the piano. [Speaking about pianist &*$#@+#]
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When she started to play, Mr. Steinway came down and personally
rubbed his name off the piano. [Speaking about pianist &*$#@+#]
The answer to this last question lies in the corporate distinction between EMI Recording and EMI Publishing. Commenting on this distinction, a France news medium merely identified EMI Publishing as a source of copyright revenues:RebLem wrote:I am still unclear as to exactly what is up for sale. Is it just their existing stock of classical releases with the masters, or is it also the contracts with their current roster of classical artists, or does it include other artists as well?
The Observer annonçait dimanche qu'il envisageait de vendre EMI Music pour ne conserver que sa branche EMI Publishing (droits d'auteurs), qui est rentable.
In the eyes of those lovers of perfection, a work is never finished—a word that for them has no sense—but abandoned....(Paul Valéry)
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Ted wrote:RebLem Wrote:Well, I’ve fashioned the noose and all my affairs are in order so I guess now the only thing left for me to do is say my goodbyes….I’d ask you if you wanted my Capitol Beatle Records, but they’re all ParliphoneUhmmm, Ted, that's Capitol Records, not Capital Records.
Don't drink and drive. You might spill it.--J. Eugene Baker, aka my late father
"We're not generating enough angry white guys to stay in business for the long term."--Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S. Carolina.
"Racism is America's Original Sin."--Francis Cardinal George, former Roman Catholic Archbishop of Chicago.
"We're not generating enough angry white guys to stay in business for the long term."--Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S. Carolina.
"Racism is America's Original Sin."--Francis Cardinal George, former Roman Catholic Archbishop of Chicago.
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Well, Ted ... they MUST be very rare. I thought those Beatles discs would be on the Parlophone label. Ha - just kidding, of course.Ted wrote:RebLem Wrote:Well, I’ve fashioned the noose and all my affairs are in order so I guess now the only thing left for me to do is say my goodbyes….I’d ask you if you wanted my Capitol Beatle Records, but they’re all ParliphoneUhmmm, Ted, that's Capitol Records, not Capital Records.
Lance G. Hill
Editor-in-Chief
______________________________________________________
When she started to play, Mr. Steinway came down and personally
rubbed his name off the piano. [Speaking about pianist &*$#@+#]
Editor-in-Chief
______________________________________________________
When she started to play, Mr. Steinway came down and personally
rubbed his name off the piano. [Speaking about pianist &*$#@+#]
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*****Lance wrote:Why don't we all pool our monetary resources, become the owners of the entire EMI recording catalogue (classical only). I would LOVE to be a CEO of such a company. I might even be compelled to do it for no fee, but that's negotiable! If EMI—"The Greatest Recording Organisation in the World"—were suddenly to fade into oblivion, just think of what a loss this would be to the music world. God only knows what the fate of the merger of RCA/Sony Classical [Columbia/CBS] is going to be in the future. Who would have ever thought two great competitors would merge as they did? It's nice that it happened as it allowed both companies to continue to operate. And think UNIVERSAL with DGG, Decca/London and Philips now under one blanket.
I probably have more EMI product on my shelves than any other single label, both LP and CD. RCA Victor would be next, and Sony/Columbia after that. They are all great catalogues. As I've said so many times, I'm glad I've got what I've got. It's been a treasure trove my whole life time.
Can't afford to invest right now but I'll be general counsel pro bono.
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