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Tencent Music Revenue Falls in First Quarter as Shares Jump

Tencent Music said revenue dropped to 6.64 billion yuan ($979 million) in the first quarter ended March 31, partly due to lower ad sales after a fresh bout of Covid-19 cases in China


Tencent Music Entertainment
The logo of China's Tencent Music Entertainment Group is seen next to an earphone in this image by Florence Lo of Reuters, from March 22, 2021.

 

China’s Tencent Music Entertainment reported a 15% decline in first-quarter revenue but its shares joined a broader surge on Tuesday as hopes rose of a loosening of regulatory curbs on tech giants.

Tencent Music said revenue dropped to 6.64 billion yuan ($979 million) in the first quarter ended March 31, partly due to lower ad sales after a fresh bout of Covid-19 cases in China. Net income attributable to equity holders of the company fell by a third to 609 million yuan.

The firm, 49%-owned by tech giant Tencent Holdings, reported that its biggest revenue driver, social entertainment services, saw a 21% decline in quarterly sales. Paying users in the segment fell to 8.3 million from 9 million in the previous quarter.

As part of a broad clampdown on China’s internet firms that began last year, regulators stripped Tencent Music of its exclusive contracts with big music labels, spurring competition from rivals like Cloud Music and Bytedance-owned short video sharing platform Douyin.

 

Hang Seng TECH Index Rallies 4.24%

Analysts said the revenue drop had been well flagged by Tencent Music, and shares gained 3.4% in after-hours New York trading as Chinese state media reported the country’s top political consultative body was hosting a meeting on Tuesday with some firms on how to promote the digital economy. The Hang Seng TECH Index in Hong Kong climbed 4.24%.

Investors and analysts shrugged off the weakness in the first-quarter performance.

“The company has given analysts ahead of time a very low expectation. And the decline seen in the social entertainment segment is also widely expected considering pressure from macroeconomics and regulation,” said Ivan Su, senior equity analyst at Morningstar.

The company also confirmed its plan to seek a secondary listing in Hong Kong is “in an active execution phase,” without providing further details.

“We will strive to move things forward in an expedited manner and obtain the necessary regulatory approvals in due course,” Cheuk Tung Yip, Tencent Music’s chief strategy officer, said in a call with analysts.

The company reported that online music paying users increased by 4 million from the prior quarter, when it added about 5 million paying users. However, the average revenue per paying user slipped in the first quarter, falling to 8.3 yuan from 9.3 yuan in the same period last year.

Yip said the company has deepened cooperation with Tencent Holdings in an effort to boost revenue. A focus for the coming quarters will be on promoting live streaming and live concerts on WeChat, Tencent’s flagship messaging platform with a billion-plus user base.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years and has a family in Bangkok.

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