Episode #413 from 5:39

Investing in music

So every consumer has a view on different brands and different companies. And what we look for are these non-disruptively businesses, a business where you can close your eyes, stock market shuts for a decade, and you know that 10 years from now it's going to be a more valuable, more profitable company. So we own a business called Universal Music Group. It's in the business of helping artists become global artists, recorded music business, and it's in the business of owning the music publishing rights of songwriters. And I think music is forever, right? Music is a many thousand year old part of the human experience, and I think it will be thousands of years from now. And so that's a pretty good backdrop to invest in a company. And the company basically owns a third of the global recorded music, the most dominant market share in the business. They're the best at taking an artist who's 18 years old, who's got a great voice, and has started to get a presence on YouTube and Instagram and helping that artist become a superstar. And that's a unique talent. And the end result is the best artists in the world want to come work for them, but they also have this incredible library of the Beatles, the Rolling Stone, U2, et cetera. And then if you think about what music has become... It used to be about what records and CDs and eight track tapes for those of whom... And it was about a new format and that's how they drive sales. And it's become a business which is like the podcast business, streaming. And streaming is a lot more predictable than selling records. You can sort of say, "Okay, how many people have smartphones? How many people are going to have smartphones next year?"

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So every consumer has a view on different brands and different companies. And what we look for are these non-disruptively businesses, a business where you can close your eyes, stock market shuts for a decade, and you know that 10 years from now it's going to be a more valuable, more profitable company. So we own a business called Universal Music Group. It's in the business of helping artists become global artists, recorded music business, and it's in the business of owning the music publishing rights of songwriters. And I think music is forever, right? Music is a many thousand year old part of the human experience, and I think it will be thousands of years from now. And so that's a pretty good backdrop to invest in a company. And the company basically owns a third of the global recorded music, the most dominant market share in the business. They're the best at taking an artist who's 18 years old, who's got a great voice, and has started to get a presence on YouTube and Instagram and helping that artist become a superstar. And that's a unique talent. And the end result is the best artists in the world want to come work for them, but they also have this incredible library of the Beatles, the Rolling Stone, U2, et cetera. And then if you think about what music has become... It used to be about what records and CDs and eight track tapes for those of whom... And it was about a new format and that's how they drive sales. And it's become a business which is like the podcast business, streaming. And streaming is a lot more predictable than selling records. You can sort of say, "Okay, how many people have smartphones? How many people are going to have smartphones next year?"

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Investing in music chapter timestamp | Bill Ackman: Investing, Financial Battles, Harvard, DEI, X & Free Speech | EpisodeIndex