Thursday, September 6, 2018

Official: Apple’s $400m buyout of Shazam has been cleared in Europe | Music Business Worldwide


Regulators in the European Union have officially cleared Apple to acquire music recognition platform Shazam for $400m.

The Cupertino giant has been granted the permission without any concessions required. The European Commission reported today (Thursday) that the deal raises “no competition concerns” in the region.

Commissioner Margrethe Vestager, in charge of competition policy, said: “Data is key in the digital economy. We must therefore carefully review transactions which lead to the acquisition of important sets of data, including potentially commercially sensitive ones, to ensure they do not restrict competition. After thoroughly analysing Shazam’s user and music data, we found that their acquisition by Apple would not reduce competition in the digital music streaming market.”

Today’s decision follows an in-depth investigation of Apple’s proposed acquisition of Shazam.

Apple operates Apple Music, said the EC, which is the second largest music streaming service in Europe, after Spotify.

The Commission found that Apple and Shazam ‘mainly offer complementary services and do not compete with each other’.

The Commission opened an in-depth investigation to assess:

  • Whether Apple would obtain access to commercially sensitive data about customers of its competitors for the provision of music streaming services in the EEA, and whether such data could allow Apple to directly target its competitors’ customers and encourage them to switch to Apple Music. As a result, competing music streaming services could have been put at a competitive disadvantage.
  • Considering Shazam’s strong position in the market for music recognition apps, whether Apple Music’s competitors would be harmed if Apple, after the transaction, were to discontinue referrals from the Shazam app to them.
  • The Commission undertook a wide range of investigative measures and received feedback from key market participants in the digital music industry, including providers of music streaming and music recognition services, as well as other stakeholders.

The Commission found:

  • The merged entity would not be able to shut out competing providers of digital music streaming services by accessing commercially sensitive information about their customers. In particular, access to Shazam’s data would not materially increase Apple’s ability to target music enthusiasts and any conduct aimed at making customers switch would only have a negligible impact. As a result, competing providers of digital music streaming services would not be shut out of the market;
  • The merged entity would not be able to shut out competing providers of digital music streaming services by restricting access to the Shazam app. This reflects the fact the app has a limited importance as an entry point to the music streaming services of Apple Music’s competitors; and
  • The integration of Shazam’s and Apple’s datasets on user data would not confer a unique advantage to the merged entity in the markets on which it operates. Any concerns in that respect were dismissed because Shazam’s data is not unique and Apple’s competitors would still have the opportunity to access and use similar databases.

Therefore, the Commission concluded that the transaction would ‘raise no competition concerns in the EEA or any substantial part of it’.Music Business Worldwide

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