Revenue for the music label was roughly flat year over year in the July-through-September period, rising by 0.2% to $1.13 billion. Digital revenue made up a significantly larger share of that sum, growing 15% to $778 million, from $674 million in the year-ago quarter.
In Warner Music’s recorded-music segment, revenue from physical sales was roughly flat in the fiscal fourth quarter, while digital sales grew 13%. Revenue from artist services, expanded rights and licensing all dropped as the pandemic disrupted touring and merchandising.
Music-publishing revenue declined 2.3% year over year, but digital music-publishing revenue was up by 32% from last year’s fourth quarter.
In its full fiscal year, which ended on Sept. 30, Warner Music’s digital revenue grew 11%, making up 65% of the company’s total revenue, compared with 58% in the previous 12-month period.
The rising importance of digital channels could persist beyond the pandemic if listeners’ social-distancing habits prove hard to break, Chief Executive Stephen Cooper told analysts on a call Monday.
Warner Music’s $1 million loss in the latest quarter—a break-even result on a per-share basis—fell short of the FactSet consensus estimate for a 4-cents-a-share profit.
The New York City-based company owns labels including Atlantic Records, Elektra Records and Warner records. It is also the parent of Warner Chappell, a music publisher.
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