‘Funflation’ & Technology Driving Music Industry Resurgence

It is earnings season in music land, and some exciting growth trends are emerging among companies involved in the global music industry. At the forefront of the industry has been renewed interest in live music in the post-pandemic environment. Call it “funflation” or revenge spend, but music fans are paying big dollars to attend live music events.

Live Nation (LYV), the concert promoter and owner of Ticketmaster, posted record results in 2023, with revenues up 36% to $22.7 billion. That’s the biggest year ever, thanks to strong concert attendance and ticket sales.

Over 145 million music fans attended some 50,000 concerts last year, despite an average price of more than $250 per ticket, with concert-goers at Taylor Swift’s Era’s Tour willing to pay an average price of over $1,000 per ticket! The average price to see U2 at the new Las Vegas Sphere (SPHR) venue is $500 per ticket.

Streaming at Record Levels

All this concert spending is also translating into increased music streaming spend. Music streams hit 4 trillion in 2023, a new single-year record, helped by country and global acts and, of course, the Taylor Swift effect. We have seen funflation price hikes among streaming services as well. Last July, Spotify raised its prices by 10%, following similar moves by YouTube Music and Amazon Music. Apple Music and Deezer also joined the trend, increasing their subscription prices from $9.99 to $10.99 per month in October of last year.

These streaming service dollars then trickle down to music content companies like Universal Music (UMG), Warner Music Group (WMG), and Sony Music Entertainment. According to industry expert and MUSQ ETF CEO David Schulhof, “70% of streaming dollars get paid down to content providers.”

It is no surprise then that Universal Music Group, with artists like Taylor Swift and Olivia Rodrigo, and Warner Music Group, benefiting from expansion into global markets, both beat earnings estimates, and Sony Music’s revenues were up 16% thanks to artists like SZA and streaming.