Universal, Sony/ATV to buy EMI for $4.1 billion

By RYAN NAKASHIMA
Associated Press

updated 11/11/2011 11:45:24 AM ET

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/45256407/ns/business/#.Tr2DxWFWh6E


LOS ANGELES — EMI Group Ltd., home of The Beatles, Coldplay and Katy 
Perry, is being sold in two parts for $4.1 billion.

Universal Music Group said Friday that it has agreed to buy the 
recording division of EMI for 1.2 billion pounds ($1.9 billion).

Sony/ATV has reached a deal to buy the second part, the publishing 
division in charge of songwriting copyrights, for $2.2 billion, 
according to a person familiar with the matter.

The deal leaves Citigroup, EMI's owner, with liability for a pension 
plan worth about $600 million, a second person said.

Both people were not authorized to speak publicly and spoke on condition 
of anonymity.

Citigroup had put the iconic British music company up for sale after 
foreclosing on private equity firm Terra Firma in February. Terra Firma 
bought EMI in 2007 in a 4.2 billion-pound ($6.8 billion) acquisition 
financed with debt from Citigroup, but it couldn't make enough money to 
keep up with the terms of its debt.

The deal is likely to face intense regulatory scrutiny because Universal 
Music, a unit of Vivendi SA, is already the world's largest music 
company with about 27 percent of the recorded music market. Adding EMI's 
approximately 9 percent will give it a clear edge over Sony Corp.'s Sony 
Music Entertainment, the second largest.

Sony/ATV, already a leading manager of songwriting copyrights, will also 
gain market share.

Impala, an association of European independent music companies, said 
this week that it would oppose such a "duopoly" taking over EMI.

In a move that may appease regulators in Europe and the U.S., Vivendi 
said it would sell 500 million euros ($680 million) worth of non-core 
assets. Strategic bidders that lost out on the auction, such as Warner 
Music Group, are expected to be in line to bid on the parts that get 
spun off.

Vivendi said that London-based EMI would find a safe home at a company 
headquartered not far away in Paris.

"For me, as an Englishman, EMI was the pre-eminent music company that I 
grew up with," said Universal CEO Lucian Grainge, in a statement. "UMG 
is committed to both preserving EMI's cultural heritage and artistic 
diversity and also investing in its artists and people to grow the 
company's assets for the future."

Universal also released statements from bands in support, including from 
Coldplay manager Dave Holmes, who said "this can only be a positive for 
the artists and executives at EMI."

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