Music industry debt plans frustrated by credit loss
These rumors come at a time when similar rumors have been announced that EMI wants to cut funding to trade groups like the Recording Industry of America, which work against piracy, and issue that the industry has been dealing with for a number of years. This plan hopes to benefit from the back catalogs of major artists and the potential future catalogs those artists will produce. The Financial Times notes "the steady revenues generated by music publishing have become increasingly prized by investors at a time when the future of the more glamorous recorded music business is uncertain." The major reason cited for that uncertainty is the industry's inability to create digital sales to replace missing CD sales.
In the end, the credit problems these companies face only indicate that new business models are needed. Luckily EMI seems to be leading some kind of change in the current model, after dropping the use of anti-piracy software in media files last April. If major retailers start to cut back on space allotted to CDs, which is another prediction the Financial Times quotes, the industry could face even more setbacks. Frankly, an expedited move toward the digital market is needed to offset a number of these problems, but that is going to take a major wake up call and changes in the credit market may serve as a needed rough shake.
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