Universal Music Group revenue drops 5% on declining CD sales; digital sales jump 54%

“Vivendi SA said Wednesday that its Universal Music Group, the world’s largest music provider, saw revenue dip 3.1% in the fourth quarter, as declining sales of physical albums took a toll on results,” David B. Wilkerson reports for MarketWatch.

“In the quarter, the Vivendi unit said revenue fell to 1.61 billion euros ($2.38 billion) from 1.66 billion euros ($2.45 billion) in the year-earlier quarter,” Wilkerson reports. “Excluding the acquisitions of BMGP and Sanctuary and at constant currency, revenue dropped 5%.”

“Digital sales jumped 54% to 188 million euros ($278.2 million), at constant currency, with strong growth in online and mobile phone categories,” Wilkerson reports.

“Since the advent of music file-sharing in the late 1990s, sales of CDs have been on the decline,” Wilkerson reports. “The introduction of Apple Computer Corp.’s [sic] iTunes platform in 2001 sped up the downturn in the CD’s popularity.”

Full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Gavin” for the heads up.]

29 Comments

  1. I’ll try wearing an analyst’s hat for a moment with an alternative comment.

    The advent of Apple’s iTunes Music Store, greatly increased the market for digital downloads which are far more profitable than CD sales and reduced free music downloadson file sharing networks.

  2. Enough is enough.

    Their revenue is falling because the product they are bringing to market is not compelling people to pay for it.

    Delivery methods will always evolve, so let’s not try to mask the failure of a business to market valuable merchandise.

  3. “The introduction of Apple Computer Corp.’s iTunes platform in 2001 sped up the downturn in the CD’s popularity.”

    There is no evidence that iTunes killed the CD, but there is much evidence that iTunes increased demand for digital music file sales. CD and MP3/AAC are NOT mutually exclusive as most iTunes users (Macintosh and Windows) actually purchase more CDs than people who do not use iTunes and most music on an iPod is ripped from purchased CDs.

    Where do these people get off with wording that is so wrong, yet can be misinterpreted as being correct by people who do not know better?

  4. They said “”Since the advent of music file-sharing in the late 1990s, sales of CDs have been on the decline,” Wilkerson reports.”

    Yea, blame the decline on stealing vs the never ending greed of the music company. Sales of CDs will continue but like said above, we the buyer want VALUE for our money, not jets for CEOs of music companies.

    en

  5. WS: remove the stick from your eye first…

    “They have officially removed ‘Computers’ from their name over a years ago.”

    Apple used to be Apple Computer but “a years ago” has always been improper.

  6. “The introduction of Apple Computer Corp.’s [sic] iTunes platform in 2001 sped up the downturn in the CD’s popularity.”

    I think that the iPod (and iTunes) came about as a result of totally crap albums released on CD. If CDs contained more than 1 or 2 good songs most people would have been content to continue listening to CD players. The iPod acted as a repository for the good songs people want to listen to. Even with iTunes’ a la carte song selection, if CDs provided good value they would have retained strong sales because they are unarguably higher quality recordings.

  7. @MCCFR…

    What compression are you talking about? Are you under the impression that audio compression via a peak limiter or a leveling amplifier like an LA2A is the same as data compression? Wrong – not the same at all. Are you thinking that because recording studios record at 96k/24 bit and CDs are 44.1k/16 bit devices, CDs are therefore compressed? Wrong again. Audio recorded at high sample and bit rates are Sample Rate Converted and Dithered down to 44.1k/16 bit.

  8. The problem is glossy CDs. Real audiophiles know the difference between glossy and matte CDs and if you listen to a glossy CD all day it has a damaging effect on your hearing.

    The labels don’t give customers choice and force them to buy glossy CDs without an option for matte. Just like Apple. Buh-bye Apple.

    Your potential. Our passion.™

  9. “Since the advent of music file-sharing in the late 1990s, sales of CDs have been on the decline,” Wilkerson reports. “The introduction of Apple Computer Corp.’s [sic] iTunes platform in 2001 sped up the downturn in the CD’s popularity.”

    I always look for logical fallacies in the media to use in my classes. This statement is a great one conflating three items.
    1. The implicit “CD’s declined *after* file sharing debuted”
    2. The explicit “iTunes *sped up* the downturn in the CD’s”
    3. Another implicit – attribute causation of the decline to both file sharing and iTunes.

    My students are good enough to find the technical name: Post hoc, ergo propter hoc of the fallacy.

    Thanks go to Wilkerson for such a nice example of specious reasoning!

  10. It was Napster that brought the decline in CD’s. Napster was rewarded when someone payed them millions for the name.
    Then the music industry started falling over themselves trying to support it because it wasn’t Apple.

    I think the music industry deserves what they are getting.

    Or. . . is it all-you-can-eat music subscriptions that is hurting CD sales.
    Do you know how easy it is to download all-you-can-eat music and then get past the copy protection?

  11. Some old, same old. In the sixties and seventies, TV supposedly killed the movie business. Movies sure don’t look dead to me!

    Digital cameras killed the 35mm film cameras. Funny, how Canon, Olympus, and Nikon are still leading the pack. How? They recognised the trend and decided to be leaders, not whiners. The customers wanted digital, and digital they got.

    Even Fuji and Kodak are doing fine in the digital age, despite the fact that their business with 35mm films crumbled. Only Agfa-Gevaert went belly-up, because they didn’t see the signs of the times.

  12. Come on Steve! Hurry up and launch iTunes Store in other countries (especially here in Singapore)! I can’t wait to do my part to hasten the death of those greedy bastards! Gimme songs! Gimme movies! Gimme a reason to buy TV and a TB hard disk!

    Thank you.

  13. …just like cell phones are killing the land-line

    cell phones: more expensive per minute, more expensive per handset, at lower quality, but that is trumped by convenience, portabillity, flexibility, and the “line to person” vs “line to location” nature…

    …and then there will be the luddites, 60 yrs from now, who will still only use landlines because is still the only “true quality” ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”wink” style=”border:0;” />

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