Spotify Now Has 75 Million Paid Subscribers, CEO Says Not Worried by Apple Music

Spotify Now Has 75 Million Paid Subscribers, CEO Says Not Worried by Apple Music
Highlights
  • Company lost EUR 41 million during Q1
  • Losses were down from EUR 139 million in the same quarter a year earlier
  • Still expected to lose EUR 230-330 million for the year: Spotify
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Top music streaming platform Spotify said Wednesday that it narrowed its losses in the first quarter, but it disappointed investors by keeping its full-year guidance steady.

Filing earnings for the first time in the wake of its listing a month ago on the New York Stock Exchange, the Swedish company said that it lost EUR 41 million ($49 million) in the three months through March.

The losses were down from EUR 139 million in the same quarter a year earlier and figured within the company's expectations.

But Wall Street focused on Spotify's full-year forecast, which it did not adjust despite the rapid growth of music streaming worldwide.

Spotify said that it still expected to lose EUR 230 to 330 million for the year.

After a robust debut on the market last month, Spotify share prices tumbled in after-hours trade Wednesday. Spotify was down eight percent two hours after its earnings announcement, up from initial lows.

Spotify CEO and co-founder Daniel Ek said that the company saw continuous growth in streaming and that he was not worried by competition from Apple.

"We don't see any kind of meaningful impact of competition," Ek told reporters and analysts on a telephone call.

"When we look at this, we don't really think that this is a winner-take-all market. In fact, we think multiple services will exist in the market and we are all in a growing market," he said.

Steady subscriber growth
Spotify said that it had reached 75 million paying subscribers, with another 99 million monthly users on its free, advertising-supported tier.

The figures marked a growth of four million paying subscribers and nine million free users since the start of 2018.

Spotify said that it saw particularly strong growth for its free service in emerging economies such as Vietnam and Thailand, two markets which the company recently entered.

Spotify said it also was seeing "increasing momentum" in Japan - the world's second-largest music market where CDs still dominate.

Ek described Japan as an "S-curve" with slow initial traction followed by rapid growth and then quick maturation.

Barry McCarthy, Spotify's chief financial officer, said that advertising revenues rose at a healthy pace except on desktop computers. He said that the United States was "far and away" the most profitable advertising market.

With the latest data Spotify remains well ahead of Apple Music. The technology giant said in March that it had 38 million subscribers on its service, which was launched in 2015 and does not have an equivalent free tier.

Streaming - which offers unlimited music online - has rapidly transformed the music industry in recent years, leading to three straight years of growth for the recorded music business.

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