Can Spotify Survive the Impending Storm As It Prepares to Go Public?
Too big to fail? All the streaming giant's agreements with the majors have expired as it seeks to renegotiate at lower rates than Apple.

As Spotify begins to prepare for an IPO, which sources say the company is planning for late 2017, the relationship between the Swedish streaming giant and its trifecta of major-label frenemies (Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Music Group) is going through some drama.
Spotify’s licensing contracts with the majors — which typically have terms of two to three years — have expired (Universal’s in Spring 2015, Warner’s at the end of last year), and, although it continues to offer their music under month-to-month deals that roll over, negotiations over new long-term agreements have been contentious. Spotify wants to pay less for music than it currently does, according to label insiders, and it already pays less than Apple Music — a rate that’s said to be about 55 percent of its revenue, as compared to Apple’s 57.5 percent, although those numbers are simplifications of complex deals. (Streaming companies also pay publishers.) The service is now asking to pay less than 50 percent, according to two major-label sources, although others say it’s not asking for that much of a reduction. It also wants to keep intact its ad-supported free tier, which promotes subscriptions but brings in relatively little revenue.
Finding compromise is more important than ever for both sides. Spotify needs the majors’ vast catalogs and without long-term deals in place, it would be hard for the company to go public — which it essentially has to do in order to satisfy the terms of a financing deal.
For the three label groups, however, Spotify may be too big to fail. Streaming now accounts for more than half of the majors’ digital revenue, and Spotify dominates the streaming market with more than 100 million monthly users. Apple Music, which hasn’t been around as long, announced it had 17 million subscribers on Sept. 7. Both Amazon and Pandora are expected to enter the market this fall, and each has enough reach with consumers to become significant competitors relatively quickly.
Spotify is thought to have paid rights-holders $5 billion so far — a figure that implies it’s now paying out almost $2 billion a year.
Spotify’s growth hasn’t given it a clear path to profitability. The Stockholm-based startup, which in 2015 was valued at $8 billion, had 2 billion euros ($2.2 billion) of revenue that year — up more than 80 percent from 2014 — but also a net loss of 173.1 million euros ($206 million). It’s under pressure to go public because in March it raised $1 billion in convertible debt, which can be exchanged to equity, under terms that grow less favorable as time passes.
“The convertible debt is essentially a ticking clock,” says MIDiA Research analyst Mark Mulligan. “They have geared everything to a window and they need to have a certain narrative for Wall Street before that time.”
Could Spotify go public -without new deals with the majors? “I don’t think there’s a definitive answer,” says Mulligan, adding it could be easier for Spotify to do so with its current month-to-month arrangements than with new deals that would make it hard to build a profitable business. However, adds an industry insider: “The labels sort of have Spotify by the balls.”
Both sides are maneuvering to get more negotiating leverage. Besides pointing to Spotify’s approaching IPO, the majors are trying to encourage competition in the streaming market, so it doesn’t end up controlled by one company the way Apple’s iTunes Store dominated download sales. They helped boost Apple Music with exclusives, until Universal Music Group chairman/CEO Lucian Grainge said his company would no longer do so on a one-service, global level.
For Spotify’s part, CEO Daniel Ek in June hired former Lady Gaga manager Troy Carter to strengthen its relationships within the industry. Also, the company is said to be softening its stance on offering music and content exclusively on the paid tier (a policy famously challenged by Taylor Swift who declined to offer her album 1989 on the service when it came out in 2014) as competing services have success with such windowing.
“The deals will get done,” says Russ Crupnick, managing partner of MusicWatch, a consultancy that has worked for both Spotify and some of the majors. “It’s in everyone’s interest. The labels have a stake in Spotify, both in terms of equity and wanting it to succeed.”
But Maverick’s Adam Leber, whose management roster includes Miley Cyrus and Britney Spears, adds that it’s important to note one key element: “As these juggernauts are negotiating, I hope they’re not forgetting the most important group of all: the artists.”
A version of this article was originally published in the Sept. 17 issue of Billboard.