Spotify Kicks Off an Earnings Season Like No Other: What to Watch for as Music Biz Lays Out Pandemic's Impact

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Starting with Spotify on Wednesday (July 29) and ending August 20, the second-quarter financials of 13 publicly traded music-related companies will lay bare the damage done by the coronavirus pandemic.

On one end of the spectrum are digital services such as Spotify that likely escaped unscathed; concert promoters, with touring suspended through the entire quarter, suffered unprecedented losses and have prepared for blank slates the rest of the year.

2) The publicly traded promoters' second-quarter earnings will reveal the coronavirus's impact. With enough liquidity to survive 2020, promoters' bigger challenge is 2021. After a torrential rally, Spotify's share price closed Monday at $272.82, up 82.4% for the year but 9.0% below the high of $299.67 reached on July 22. Investors' ringing enthusiasm stems from a string of podcast deals with the likes of. The run-up was mostly anticipation for future benefits of an aggressive push into podcasting.

: up 17% year-over-year but, more importantly, down sequentially from $462 million to $454 million in the first quarter.

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