”Anything you can think of we can do”
Live Nation Inc. was expected to provide commentary on their new high-profile partnership with the Queen of Pop on Thursday. In fact, ever since the giant concert promoter announced a sweeping 10-year deal with Madonna to handle her albums, tours and merchandize, investors had in fact worried that the company spent too much to lure the superstar away from Warner Music Group.
CEO Michael Rapino and his top executives defended the deal yesterday before investors and analysts gathered at the Fillmore New York at Irving Plaza, one of Live Nation’s venues.
Judging from the immediate reaction the Street isn’t yet convinced – the stock has fallen roughly 30 percent since the news came out last month and it was off slightly in early trading Friday.
The Live Nation executives didn’t offer up exact figures of the deal – citing a confidentiality agreement with the material girl – but they did estimate it will be valued at roughly $100 million for Madonna.
Live Nation paid Madonna $25 million in stock as an advance. In addition, according to a person familiar with the terms, Madonna received about $25 million in cash, although Rapino wouldn’t confirm this. For each dollar that that comes in, Los Angeles-based Live Nation gets a share and Madonna gets a share that counts against her advance.
Michael Cohl, who runs Live Nation’s Artist Nation division and helped broker the contract with Madonna, described the deal as pure partnership and said that any money after that is a basic revenue share, although the splits vary depending on the products. The problem, he said, is that people are viewing the deal as if it’s a record deal – and everyone knows the record business is suffering.
Instead, he said, investors need to realize that the rights deal will be “cross collateralized” across dozens of products – from ticket sales to DVDs and books, from t-shirts and clothing lines to streaming videos and private concerts.
“Anything you can think of we can do,” said Cohl, who runs tours for the Rolling Stones, among other acts.
“Make no mistake,” said Rapino. “We are not getting into the record business. We are not building a system to sell 6-inch discs… We’re a marketing and distribution company.”
Record labels have big infrastructures around the world to get CDs into stores, but Rapino argues he doesn’t need that.
He likes to point to the deal the Eagles just did to sell its 2-disc set exclusively through Wal-Mart, without having to give a cut to a label. They sold 700,000 in the first week. Whether its Wal-Mart or Starbucks or Victoria’s Secret, Rapino said plenty of companies are eager to cut deals to distribute albums.
“Corporate America couldn’t be more excited about the demise of the record companies,” he said.
From an article by Paul Sloan, Fortune.