Music-streaming giant Spotify said on Wednesday that it ended the first quarter with 158 million premium, or paid, subscribers, hitting the high end of its forecast range, and 356 million total active monthly users, "within our guidance range but modestly below our internal expectations."
According to The Hollywood Reporter, the figures were up from 155 million premium users as of the end of 2020 and 345 million total users. For the first quarter, Spotify management had predicted monthly active users (MAUs) to grow to 354-364 million, with premium subscribers to reach 155-158 million.
"We saw greater MAU variability this quarter, but results were within our range of expectations given the outperformance in the fourth quarter and the continued impact from COVID-19," the company said. "We saw meaningful contributions from markets such as the U.S., Mexico, Russia, and India. However, growth was lower than plan in Latin America and Europe. In aggregate, the performance of our newly launched markets was in line with our expectations."
Daniel Eck |
Stockholm-based Spotify, led by CEO Daniel Ek, said advertising revenue continued to rise in the most recent quarter, up 46 percent over the year-ago period, or 57 percent when assuming constant currencies.
Podcasting continues to be a focus for the company. At the end of of the first quarter, it had 2.6 million podcasts on its platform, up from more than 2.2 million at the end of 2020. "The percentage of MAUs that engaged with podcast content on our platform was consistent with fourth-quarter levels," Spotify said. "From a consumption standpoint, we saw a strong increase in first-quarter podcast consumption hours versus the fourth quarter, with March activity driving an all-time high in terms of podcast share of overall platform consumption hours. The Joe Rogan Experience performed above expectations with respect to new user additions and engagement."
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