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USA - Apple confirms $3bn Beats purchase [FRANCE 24]
[May 28, 2014]

USA - Apple confirms $3bn Beats purchase [FRANCE 24]


(FRANCE 24 Via Acquire Media NewsEdge) Apple said it would buy headphone maker Beats Electronics, a headphone and music streaming specialist for about $3 billion on Wednesday, with Beats co-founders Jimmy Iovine and rapper Dr. Dre joining Apple as part of the acquisition.



Wednesday's announcement comes nearly three weeks after deal negotiations were leaked to the media. It's by far the most expensive acquisition in Apple's 38-year history, a price that the company is paying to counter a threat posed to its iTunes store.

The price consists of $2.6 billion in cash and $400 million in Apple stock that will vest over an unspecified time period. The deal is expected to close before October.


With $1.1 billion in revenue last year, Beats is already making money and will boost Apple's earnings once the new fiscal year begins in October, Apple CEO Tim Cook told AP.

"We have known these guys forever," Cook said of Iovine and Dre. "We've dated, we've gone steady and now we are getting married. This relationship started a decade ago, so we know there is an incredible cultural fit. These two guys have a very rare set of skills. It's like finding a particular grain of sand on the beach. It's that rare." Iovine, 61, and Dre, 49, will both become key executives in Apple's music divisions, though Cook said their roles haven't been determined yet. Cook indicated Beats' music streaming service was the main selling point in the deal, though the headphone line also is expected to continue growing, too.

Although he believes most technology companies are "culturally inept," Iovine said he believes Apple will empower Beats to realise its goals of improving the sound of digital music and creating playlists tailored for each subscriber.

"To complete our dream, we needed a company like [Apple]," Iovine said in an interview. "We couldn't finish this on our own." The growing popularity of music streaming services such as Spotify and Pandora has been reducing sales of songs and albums, a business that iTunes has dominated for the past decade. US sales of downloaded songs slipped 1 percent last year to $2.8 billion while streaming music revenue surged 39 percent to $1.4 billion, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.

iTunes Radio flop Although Apple broke into streaming with the launch of iTunes Radio last September, the service has not been as popular or as lucrative as the company expected, according to two people familiar with the matter. The people were not authorised to speak publicly about the matter and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The free service, which has 40 million listeners, will continue with ads while Beats Music will try to tap into the more than 800 million accounts to sell more subscriptions to its customised service. Beats Music currently has more than 250,000 subscribers, Cook said. That's well below the more than 10 million paying customers that Spotify's streaming service boasts.

Apple is counting on the Beats acquisition to boost its cachet with teenagers and younger adults while trying to remain a leader in digital music – an industry that has changed dramatically since Apple launched the iPod in 2001.

"Apple suddenly has regained its cool," said Sony Music CEO Doug Morris, who was one of the first recording executives to embrace iTunes at Iovine's urging more than a decade ago.

Beats, which dominates the luxury headphone market, was founded in 2008 by Dr. Dre, whose real name is Andre Young, and Iovine, a long-time recording industry executive who is stepping down as chairman of Universal Music Group's Interscope Geffen A&M Records to join Apple.

Operating from its Culver City, California, headquarters, Beats commands 62 percent of the $1 billion US market for headphones priced above $100, according to NPD Group. Its equipment has been a big seller in Apple stores.

The purchase marks Apple CEO Tim Cook's biggest strategic break from the way the company was led under co-founder Steve Jobs, who died in October 2011. Jobs favoured smaller acquisitions and didn't believe subscription music plans would be popular. Before Beats, Apple's biggest acquisition had been its $400 million purchase of NeXt Computer, a company that Jobs founded after being ousted from Apple in the 1980s.

Cook said he never considered what Jobs would have thought about the Beats' acquisition during the negotiations. Jobs "told me to do what was right," Cook said. "And I am 100 percent certain this is what is right. This is one of those things that we will look back upon and say it was meant to be." 'Complete opposite of Apple' Morris, who considers Iovine to be his best friend, believes Cook is making a smart move that will give Apple even more credibility in the music industry.

"It's a game changer because Jimmy is that kind of guy who can change a game," Morris said. "I am not saying he is Steve Jobs, but he is a guy with new ideas and he really knows how to build the bridge between music and technology." But some analysts question whether Beats will be a good fit for Apple, which makes most of its money selling hardware such as iPhones and iPads.

Forrester Research analyst Frank Gillett told AP that Apple would have been better off developing its own in-house headphones and expanding into music subscriptions through iTunes.

"It's hard to understand why Apple would have to spend $3 billion on a nascent streaming service and a line of bass-heavy headphones," Gillett says.

Yukari Iwatani Kane, the author of "Haunted Empire," an inside look at Apple since Jobs's death, also sees a disconnect. "Culturally, Beats is the complete opposite of Apple," Kane says. "It's known for being loud and bold and in your face. It doesn't fit with Apple's understated, discerning brand." Having visited Apple on a regular basis since he first met Jobs more than a decade ago, Iovine said he has no qualms about joining Apple.

"This is not a big company to us," Iovine said. "We can roller skate in the halls here. Dre and I have been working together for 22 years. We are not about to go somewhere where we are going to fall." Dre was more sedate on Wednesday than he seemed in a celebratory video posted online declaring him as hip-hop's first billionaire after news of the Apple talks leaked earlier this month. "To be able to do something that could potentially change the world, I'm thrilled," he told AP.

(FRANCE 24 with AP, REUTERS) More videos available on http://www.france24.com/en (c) 2014  2014  FRANCE 24. All rights reserved. Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info).

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