Its paid music service is on pace to become No. 1 in U.S. as rival readies share sale

By Anne Steele 

This article is being republished as part of our daily reproduction of WSJ.com articles that also appeared in the U.S. print edition of The Wall Street Journal (February 5, 2018).

Apple Music is on the verge of overtaking Spotify AB in U.S. paid subscribers, a sign that the music-streaming world's dominant force is facing growing competition ahead of its hotly anticipated public stock offering.

Apple Inc.'s streaming-music service, introduced in June 2015, has been adding subscribers in the U.S. more rapidly than its older Swedish rival -- a monthly growth rate of 5% versus 2% -- according to people in the record business familiar with figures reported by the two services. Assuming that clip continues, Apple will overtake Spotify in the world's biggest music market this summer.

Apple's music-streaming service has been quietly gaining ground in part thanks to the popularity of the company's devices: Apple Music comes preloaded on all iPhones, Apple Watches and other hardware the company sells.

Globally, however, Spotify remains in a league of its own, with nearly twice as many paid subscribers than No. 2 Apple, and slightly faster subscriber growth. Other players in paid streaming music include Pandora Media Inc., Amazon.com Inc. and Alphabet's YouTube.

The introduction of streaming services has fueled a recovery for the record industry following years of declines amid plummeting sales of CDs and, more recently, downloads. Streaming customers pay a flat monthly fee or listen to ads in exchange for unlimited access to vast music catalogs; with downloads, consumers pay for individual songs or albums once and own them permanently. Paid subscriptions, up 61%, were the largest source of record-company revenue in the U.S. in the first half of 2017, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.

But music streaming has yet to prove itself as a viable business as the tech companies operating these services struggle to make them profitable. Active users and paid subscribers are the most closely watched metrics as these services grow.

One question lingering in the industry is what metrics Spotify will have to disclose once it becomes a publicly traded company. The service has periodically released global subscriber totals and just last month touted a new high of 70 million.

Apple Music told The Wall Street Journal it now has 36 million paid global users, up from the 30 million it last reported in September.

But both companies' numbers are increased by counting individual users who are part of family plans and people with discounted subscriptions bundled with other services. In some countries, mobile-phone plans can include an Apple Music subscription; Spotify offers students in the U.S. a subscription plan that includes video-service Hulu. Neither company publicly breaks out figures for the U.S. or any other single market.

In their licensing deals, labels let streaming services pay lower royalty rates for music when they meet certain subscription-growth targets. As part of those deals, the services are required to report how many accounts they have -- a number not inflated by multiple users on a family subscription. They also have to report the number of monthly active subscribers they have, stripping out people who were signed up in bundle deals but don't use the service and are likely to churn.

By one standard, Apple Music has already passed Spotify. Including people who are still in free or deeply discounted trial periods leading up to paid subscription, Apple Music has a slight edge on Spotify in the U.S., according to one of the people familiar with the figures.

Apple Music has three to four times the number of such trial users as Spotify, according to this person, in part because it doesn't offer a free tier. Also, all Apple Music subscribers are entered automatically into a free initial three-month period. Excluding those trial users, Spotify is ahead, but by a small amount -- and that gap is closing.

Apple's services segment, which includes Apple Music as well as the App Store and its payment services, was a bright spot in the company's earnings posted last week, with an 18% jump in revenue. It is unclear how much Apple Music contributed to that increase as the company doesn't break out the streaming service's results.

Launched in 2008, Spotify lets users listen to a library of more than 30 million songs on demand. It started offering its service in the U.S. in 2011. Subscribers who shell out $9.99 a month can listen without hearing ads; users of the free version need to sit through ads and have more limited ability to pick the order in which they hear the songs they select. As of June, Spotify said it has 140 million active users world-wide. Spotify has never reported a profit, but has said it believes it can become profitable once it has amassed sufficient users, without specifying what that scale would be.

Apple Music allows users to stream from a catalog of 45 million songs or play from their own iTunes library. It has only ever offered an individual $9.99-a-month subscription tier.

Both Spotify and Apple Music offer $4.99-a-month student plans and $14.99-a-month family plans, which up to six individuals can use.

Spotify is available in 61 territories, including the U.S. Apple Music is available in 115.

Next week, Apple will begin selling its voice-activated speaker, HomePod, which the tech giant has tried to differentiate from competitors' earlier offerings by promising better sound quality. The device has been marketed as a way to listen to Apple Music, which it will play directly; other music-streaming services can be played only over Apple's AirPlay. The introduction of the HomePod has the potential to boost Apple Music subscriptions.

Write to Anne Steele at Anne.Steele@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

February 05, 2018 02:47 ET (07:47 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2018 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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