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Warner Music Group (WMG) earnings stunk

Posted Aug 7th 2007 9:29AM by Jonathan Berr
Filed under: Earnings reports, Products and services, Consumer experience, Competitive strategy

The White Stripes performing at Sloss Furnace in Birmingham, Alabama, USA on 30 July 2007. Warner Music Group Inc. (NYSE: WMG), whose roster of artists includes Madonna, the White Stripes and the Red Hot Chili Peppers, today reported that its third quarter net loss widened as sales continued to shift away from CDs to digital sales.

The company lost $17 million, or 12 cents per share, compared with $14 million, or 10 cents, the New York-based company said in a press release. Revenue fell 2% to $804 million. Excluding one-time items, profit was 20 cents. Wall Street analysts, who excluded these types of charges, expected a loss of 14 cents on revenue of $836 million.

Digital revenue was a bright spot, rising 29% to $119 million. The company's recorded music, however, performed poorly, dropping 4% to $653 million.

Shares of Warner Music Group have dropped almost 52% this year, even though Wall Street cheered the company's decision not to bid for EMI Group Plc. The shares, though, have recently rebounded and were poised to open higher today as investors expressed confidence that Warner Music will be able to survive the upheaval caused by the digital music revolution.


Tags: digital music, DigitalMusic, linkin park, LinkinPark, madonna, recording industry, RecordingIndustry, warner music group, WarnerMusicGroup, white stripes, WhiteStripes, wmg

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