How Spotify's Listing Could Differ From High-Profile IPOs
Spotify is one step closer to going public. The music streaming company has reportedly filed confidential papers for its direct listing.
Cheddar spoke with Axios business editor Dan Primack, who broke the story. He says the “direct listing” could mean the offering is different from what we saw from high-profile IPOs like Snap last year.
“This will be a much slower sort of offering, this isn’t the situation where you should be expecting a massive pop necessarily,” he said. “It’s the sort of thing where insiders will be allowed to sell whenever they want to sell. You won’t be having the traditional lockups on early employees...Chances are [Spotify has] done deals ahead of time with some big mutual funds.”
Spotify will list shares directly at the New York Stock Exchange, bypassing the traditional IPO process and avoiding underwriting fees. Primack, though, says several banks will still be involved.
The documents were filed at the end of last month, but the news comes after separate reports that Spotify also faces a $1.6 billion copyright lawsuit. The music publisher that controls licenses to thousands of songs from artists such as Tom Petty, The Doors, and Neil Young, claims Spotify doesn’t have rights to distribute the content.
How that lawsuit plays out could be one of the risks looming over the company’s listing.
“All indications are that they want to go [public] in Q1,” Primack said. “It’s unclear how the lawsuit is going to play into it, but that’s the plan right now. This thing should be out by the end of March.”
For full interview [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/spotify-enters-2018-with-a-bang).
Adam Coons, chief portfolio manager of Winthrop Capital Management, joined Cheddar News to discuss Wednesday's market session amid weak job market data and what lies ahead in the near-term future.
In a clash of fast casual titans, Chipotle Mexican Grill is filing a lawsuit against Sweetgreen for trademark infringement. The salad purveyor recently released a meal offering called "Chipotle Chicken Burrito Bowl," which Chipotle said is being marketed in a "very similar" way as its own products and includes many of the same ingredients.
The number of Americans applying for unemployment benefits fell this week as the labor market continues to hold up in the face of the Federal Reserve aggressive campaign to cool the economy and bring down inflation.
Wall Street is drifting amid mixed trading Thursday, threatening to send the S&P 500 to its first losing week in the last four following some discouraging reports on the economy.
The upcoming trial in a voting machine company’s defamation lawsuit against Fox News for airing false allegations of vote fraud in the 2020 presidential election will not include testimony about the Jan. 6 uprising at the U.S. Capitol, a judge ruled Wednesday.
Ted Rossman, a senior industry analyst with Bankrate.com, joined Cheddar News to provide guidance on how to raise your credit score, especially for would-be homebuyers.
Chipotle filed a lawsuit in California federal court against Sweetgreen over the salad chain's chicken burrito bowl, claiming infringement for using the word "chipotle" in the name.