Stocks for music lovers are having a rough week, as many major streaming companies saw their shares plummet. The latest earnings reports from some of the biggest players in the industry have investors worried about the future of the business.
Tencent Music Entertainment (TME), the parent company of QQ Music and Kugou, fell 11% to $18.93 after its third-quarter earnings report showed strong growth but also revealed that offline sales are outpacing online revenue. This has led some analysts to lower their price targets for the stock, citing concerns about margins.
Spotify was one of the few winners in this latest round of earnings reports, rising 3.1% to $635.81 after it announced a new Premium Platinum plan that will replace Premium Family in five markets. However, even Spotify's shares are down 25.9% over the last 13 weeks, and the company is still 58.8% below its all-time high.
Another streaming stock, Netease Cloud Music, has also seen its share price fall, dropping 30.8% in the past nine weeks despite a strong year-to-date gain of 64.8%.
The Billboard Global Music Index (BGMI), which tracks the performance of 19 major music companies, fell 0.1% to 2,700.25 for the week. This is the eighth consecutive week that the index has failed to post a gain, and it's down 12.9% over those eight weeks.
Other music stocks also saw significant declines this week. StubHub, an online ticket reseller, fell 23.5% to $14.87 after its first quarterly earnings release as a public company, citing concerns about guidance for the fourth quarter. The stock is now 36.7% below its initial public offering price.
Warner Music Group (WMG) was one of the few winners in this latest round of earnings reports, rising 0.4% to $30.36 after it announced plans to report results for its fourth quarter and fiscal year next week.
HYBE, the parent company of BTS and other K-pop acts, fell 2.6% to 297,500 won ($205.24) despite an announcement that the members of NewJeans will be returning to HYBE's ADOR imprint after a brief departure.
Universal Music Group fell 0.8% to 22.30 euros ($25.92), while Cumulus Media plummeted 28.8% to $0.0085, bringing its year-to-date decline to 88.9%.
Tencent Music Entertainment (TME), the parent company of QQ Music and Kugou, fell 11% to $18.93 after its third-quarter earnings report showed strong growth but also revealed that offline sales are outpacing online revenue. This has led some analysts to lower their price targets for the stock, citing concerns about margins.
Spotify was one of the few winners in this latest round of earnings reports, rising 3.1% to $635.81 after it announced a new Premium Platinum plan that will replace Premium Family in five markets. However, even Spotify's shares are down 25.9% over the last 13 weeks, and the company is still 58.8% below its all-time high.
Another streaming stock, Netease Cloud Music, has also seen its share price fall, dropping 30.8% in the past nine weeks despite a strong year-to-date gain of 64.8%.
The Billboard Global Music Index (BGMI), which tracks the performance of 19 major music companies, fell 0.1% to 2,700.25 for the week. This is the eighth consecutive week that the index has failed to post a gain, and it's down 12.9% over those eight weeks.
Other music stocks also saw significant declines this week. StubHub, an online ticket reseller, fell 23.5% to $14.87 after its first quarterly earnings release as a public company, citing concerns about guidance for the fourth quarter. The stock is now 36.7% below its initial public offering price.
Warner Music Group (WMG) was one of the few winners in this latest round of earnings reports, rising 0.4% to $30.36 after it announced plans to report results for its fourth quarter and fiscal year next week.
HYBE, the parent company of BTS and other K-pop acts, fell 2.6% to 297,500 won ($205.24) despite an announcement that the members of NewJeans will be returning to HYBE's ADOR imprint after a brief departure.
Universal Music Group fell 0.8% to 22.30 euros ($25.92), while Cumulus Media plummeted 28.8% to $0.0085, bringing its year-to-date decline to 88.9%.