November 16, 2024

Google Expected to Start A Competitor to Spotify

Google is planning to introduce the new service as early as Wednesday at Google I/O, the company’s annual conference for software developers. The subscription feature will be connected to Play, Google’s online media hub, complementing its download store and “locker” feature, which lets people store their digital entertainment collections online, according to these people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity before Google’s official announcement.

News of the announcement first appeared on The Verge, a technology-oriented Web site. A Google spokeswoman declined to comment.

Google has been developing entertainment features for Android mobile devices, which puts the company in direct competition with digital music leaders like Apple, whose iTunes store is the largest retailer of music — digital or physical — in the United States. While Android phones and other devices remain extremely popular, Google has had limited success with its download store, people in the music business say.

By expanding to streaming music, Google will be tapping into the most rapid growth area in digital music. Spotify, which was founded in Sweden in 2008 and came to the United States almost two years ago, now has more than 24 million regular users, six million of whom pay about $5 to $10 a month for premium service. Pandora now has more than 200 million users, the vast majority of whom use it free.

Apple is also said to be developing a Pandora-like Internet radio service, although its negotiations with record labels and publishers have been slow.

Google’s streaming service will not include a free tier, according to the people briefed on the plans. The subscription rate was not known, but was expected to be similar to that of Spotify and other competing services like Rhapsody and Rdio, about $10 a month.

To get the licenses it needs, Google has been negotiating with record companies for months — a slow process in any case, which sometimes takes longer in Google’s case because of its complicated relationship with the major record companies. While record labels now turn to Google’s YouTube for a big part of their promotional campaigns, the labels’ trade group, the Recording Industry Association of America, has criticized Google for not doing enough to combat online music piracy.

Google is said to have licensing deals for the service with the three major record labels: the Universal Music Group, Sony Music Entertainment and the Warner Music Group. Representatives of those labels declined to comment.

Making matters more complicated, the service to be unveiled this week is one of two parallel music services being prepared by separate branches of Google. YouTube, which last week introduced a few dozen paid video channels, is also said to be developing a music service. The details of YouTube’s service are unclear, but negotiations are said to be continuing with music companies.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/15/business/media/google-set-to-introduce-music-service-to-compete-with-spotify.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Sirius XM Reports Gains in Income and Subscribers

Sirius XM said revenue rose 12 percent, $897 million, from the period a year earlier, but was lower than the $906 million analysts had predicted.

Net income increased 15 percent to $124 million, while earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization — adjusted to eliminate some charges including the effect of the 2008 merger between Sirius and XM — were $262 million, up 26 percent from a year earlier.

Sirius XM earned 2 cents a share, one cent less than analysts had predicted.

The company’s subscriber growth continued to be a bright spot, even after a rare price increase last year. It was the first time Sirius had raised the subscription rate; XM had done it once before. Sirius XM gained 453,000 subscribers in the quarter, bringing its total to 24.4 million. In the last two years its subscriber ranks have grown 19 percent.

“Sirius XM’s first-quarter results show a continuation of our trend of strong, profitable growth,” Mr. Meyer said in a statement.

One concern for investors, however, is an increase in “churn” rate, a measurement of subscriber turnover. In recent years, that number had been gradually reduced to 1.9 percent, but in the most recent quarter it was 2 percent.

Mr. Meyer, who had been Sirius’s president for sales and operations since 2004, was named interim chief executive in December after the departure of Mel Karmazin. He was appointed to the post permanently in a separate announcement on Tuesday by Gregory B. Maffei, who became chairman on April 10.

Mr. Maffei is the president and chief executive of Liberty Media, which since 2009 had been Sirius XM’s largest investor and took over the company, which is based in New York, last year by acquiring a majority of its shares.

Sirius XM shares rose 18 cents, or 5.9 percent, to close at $3.25 on Tuesday.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/01/business/media/sirius-xm-reports-income-and-subscriber-growth.html?partner=rss&emc=rss