World Print 2020-02-17

Vivendi plans IPO of Universal by early 2023

French media conglomerate Vivendi SA said on Thursday it planned to list its most-prized asset, Universal Music Group, by early 2023 at the latest, following a year of record profit for the division. This represents a new milestone in a two-year process l
Published 17 Feb, 2020 12:00am

French media conglomerate Vivendi SA said on Thursday it planned to list its most-prized asset, Universal Music Group, by early 2023 at the latest, following a year of record profit for the division. This represents a new milestone in a two-year process launched by Vivendi's top investor, Vincent Bollore, to make the most of the world's biggest music label, home to artists Taylor Swift, Drake and Lady Gaga.

It is a also a change of heart for the Paris-based group, as it had said it considered an initial public offering (IPO) of Universal as too complex back in 2018. Chief Executive Arnaud de Puyfontaine declined to give further details on the potential IPO but said Universal's stellar performance could draw further interest from investors.

Vivendi's comments come less than a week after rival Warner Music Group filed publicly with US regulators for an IPO. A consortium led by China's tech giant Tencent Holdings Ltd bought 10 percent of Universal last December in a deal that valued it at 30 billion euros. The same consortium can buy a further 10 percent of Universal's share capital until mid-January 2021.

The music label's earnings before interest, tax and amortisation (EBITA) jumped by 22 percent at constant currency and perimeter from a year earlier to 1.12 billion euros ($1.21 billion), boosting group profit. In contrast, Vivendi's second-biggest division, pay-TV Canal Plus, saw revenue and profit drop on a comparable basis, penalised by the departure of subscribers in France on heightened competition from video-streaming platforms such as Netflix.

Group revenue was up 5.6 percent last year at 15.9 billion euros. The group returned 3.3 billion euros to shareholders last year via share buybacks and dividends. It will offer a divided of 60 cents per share in 2019, up 20 percent from a year earlier.

Copyright Reuters, 2020

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