Universal Music’s blockbuster listing: don’t stop me now…

Investors are betting heavily that the ‘boom in music streaming’, which has transformed Universal’s fortunes, ‘still has a long way to go’

Lucian Grainge is CEO of Universal Music Group
Lucian Grainge: ‘good ears’
(Image credit: Jesse Grant/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

In a recent note to investors, analysts at J.P. Morgan Cazenove described Universal Music as an “extraordinary, must-own asset”, adding that its €34bn (£29bn) valuation might prove conservative, and predicting one of €54bn (£46.1bn). The world’s biggest music company didn’t quite hit that high note when debuting on Euronext in Amsterdam, in “Europe’s largest listing this year”, said Reuters. But shares in the group – whose talent ranges from The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan and Queen, to Lady Gaga, Taylor Swift and Billie Eilish – nonetheless “leapt by more than a third”, arriving at a valuation of €45bn (£38.4bn). Investors are clearly betting heavily that the “boom in music streaming”, which has transformed the label’s fortunes, “still has a long way to go”.

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