EMI latest: frontrunner pulls out

EMI latest: frontrunner pulls out

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norman lebrecht

October 31, 2011

The weekend business pages had Warner on the verge of becoming EMI’s new owner.

What they didn’t know was that Warner followed Universal late last week in pulling out. They didn’t like the numbers. Today’s Financial Times broke the story.

So who does that leave? BMG, Sony or yet another hedge fund.

Alternately, Citigroup could call off the sale or drop the price.

Such a bunch of bankers.

*

Here’s the Reuters version:

LONDON, Oct 31 (Reuters) – The frontrunner in the sale of British music EMI’s assets, Len Blavatnik’s Warner Music Group, has walked away from their auction, the Financial Times reported on Monday.
Blavatnik, whose Access Industries group bought Warner Music earlier this year, had looked set to win from Citigroup a $1.5 billion deal for EMI’s labels which include Capitol and Virgin.

The newspaper cited people close to the negotiations as saying offers for EMI’s recorded music division remained below the price at which the U.S. bank was prepared to sell the asset it seized in February from its previous private equity owner, Terra Firma .

However, the sources cited did not rule out Blavatnik returning to the table, as he did after a similar threat three weeks ago, adding that it may not be clear for two weeks or more whether Citigroup will settle for offers below initial hopes or retain EMI for at least another year.

Citigroup and bidders’ representatives were unavailable for immediate comment.

EMI’s record labels, home to marquee names including the Beatles and Coldplay, have always been the glamorous end of the business.

Bids for the song catalogs of EMI Music have come in closer to Citi’s expectations but the early offers for its record labels had been underwhelming.

Sources cited in the article said Citigroup’s negotiations over EMI Music Publishing appeared to have made more progress, with a frontrunning offer of about $2 billion from BMG, the joint venture between Bertelsmann and Kohlberg Kravis Roberts .

A Sony-led challenge for EMI’s publishing operation is still working to secure financing from sovereign wealth funds and elsewhere, according to the article.

People close to several bidders, cited by the FT, believe the bank is prepared to keep EMI if it is unhappy with the offers.

 

Comments

  • Where have all the Angels gone?

  • Yi-Peng Li says:

    In the event of a split in the company I hope that Universal will come back and win the EMI label. As I’ve previously mentioned I think that both Universal and EMI will fit better together because of their similar long histories. So Polydor can distribute Parlophone and Verve can distribute Blue Note. Hopefully EMI Classics can be a sister label to Decca and DG.

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