Ticketmaster And Live Nation Agree To Merge

The Seeker of Good Songs

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Feb. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Live Nation Inc. and Ticketmaster Entertainment Inc., the largest companies in live music, agreed to merge and began a defense against antitrust concerns raised by lawmakers, consumer groups and Bruce Springsteen.
Shareholders in each company will own about half the equity in the new one, which will have an enterprise value of about $2.5 billion, according to a statement today. The new Live Nation Entertainment will have almost $6 billion in annual sales.
Concerns over the power of the combined company arose before the deal was announced. Ticketmaster owns the world’s largest ticket-selling network and the biggest artist-management firm. Live Nation is the largest concert promoter, owns the most venues and has exclusive deals with Madonna, U2 and Jay-Z.
“It’s going to get a thorough review,” said Marc Schildkraut, an attorney with Howrey LLP in Washington who was previously assistant director of the Federal Trade Commission’s competition bureau. “You have a firm that has a very large share of the ticket-selling market and they are acquiring a challenger.”
Ticketmaster Chairman Barry Diller, who will hold that title at the new company, defended the merger, saying it won’t lead to higher ticket prices. Diller said he’s been working to combine the companies “for many years.”
“Ticketmaster does not set prices, Live Nation does not set prices. Artists set the prices,” Diller said on a conference call. “Everyone else is just a distributor or a service provider.”





(story contimues at the link)
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601088&sid=a19SM2_rtZJQ&refer=home
 
Thanks for the info and the link, Seeker.

It's well worth reading.
Some quotes

Ticketmaster’s CEO, Irving Azoff, will become executive chairman and CEO of the Front Line artist-management unit. The board will be split evenly among representatives from both companies, they said.
The new company will work to simplify the ticketing process and increase attendance at events, he said.

Springsteen criticized the merger plan as a “near monopoly situation” after some people were unable to buy tickets to his American tour through Ticketmaster. Fans were redirected to the company’s TicketsNow reseller Web site, which charged many times the original prices.

(Ticketmaster chairman) Diller said the Springsteen sale has become a “sexy issue” because Ticketmaster “has never been perceived to be on the side of angels.” He blamed processing problems by credit card company Visa Inc.
“Ticketmaster is not in the business of denying primary tickets to anybody in order to push them to the secondary marketplace,” Diller said.
Visa spokesman Joe Carberry said in an e-mail the credit- card company’s system was “fully functional” during the sale and that Diller’s comments were “inaccurate.”


Live Nation reported long-term debt of $739.4 million as of Sept. 30. Ticketmaster, spun off from Diller’s IAC/InterActiveCorp in August, has long-term debt of $765 million.

Hmmmm..
 
i really cant see this merger as being a good thing
we need more, smaller, better ticket vendors
not an even larger & more evil entity like this :cool:
 
Thanks for the info and the link, Seeker.

It's well worth reading.
Some quotes

Ticketmaster’s CEO, Irving Azoff, will become executive chairman and CEO of the Front Line artist-management unit. The board will be split evenly among representatives from both companies, they said.
The new company will work to simplify the ticketing process and increase attendance at events, he said.

Springsteen criticized the merger plan as a “near monopoly situation” after some people were unable to buy tickets to his American tour through Ticketmaster. Fans were redirected to the company’s TicketsNow reseller Web site, which charged many times the original prices.

(Ticketmaster chairman) Diller said the Springsteen sale has become a “sexy issue” because Ticketmaster “has never been perceived to be on the side of angels.” He blamed processing problems by credit card company Visa Inc.
“Ticketmaster is not in the business of denying primary tickets to anybody in order to push them to the secondary marketplace,” Diller said.
Visa spokesman Joe Carberry said in an e-mail the credit- card company’s system was “fully functional” during the sale and that Diller’s comments were “inaccurate.”


Live Nation reported long-term debt of $739.4 million as of Sept. 30. Ticketmaster, spun off from Diller’s IAC/InterActiveCorp in August, has long-term debt of $765 million.

Hmmmm..
Considering the "service charges" for being "serviced" can someone explain to me how Ticketmaster is in debt?
 
Live Nation reported long-term debt of $739.4 million as of Sept. 30. Ticketmaster, spun off from Diller’s IAC/InterActiveCorp in August, has long-term debt of $765 million.

Bailout.
Problem solved. ... you're welcome.
 
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live nation livenation monopoly only yoda knows scalpers scum ticket master ticketmaster touts
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