Spotify and China's Tencent are going to buy shares in each other

The world's biggest music streaming platform Spotify of Sweden and China's Tencent said on Friday they had agreed to take minority stakes in each other.

With the deal both companies would seek to "explore collaboration opportunities", they said in a joint statement.

Tencent's subsidiary Tencent Music Entertainment (TME) and Spotify will pay cash for unspecified shareholdings in each other, while the Tencent parent company will also invest in Spotify by buying existing shares in the Swedish company.

Tencent, which operates social media platforms in China, is also the country's largest online music services company, claiming hundreds of millions of users.

"We are delighted to facilitate this strategic collaboration between the two largest digital music platforms in the world," Tencent President Martin Lau said in the statement.

Spotify Chief Executive Daniel Ek said both companies "see significant opportunities in the global music streaming market for all our users, artists, music and business partners" and would allow them "to benefit from the global growth of music streaming".

The Tencent deal comes amid talk of a hotly-awaited stock market flotation for Spotify expected in coming months, with analysts estimating the company to be worth at least $10 billion.

Spotify says it has about 60 million paying premium subscribers, with another 80 million using the platform's free streaming service.

In April, Spotify had already signed a global licencing agreement with the Universal Music Group.

Chinese social media and video game giant Tencent became more valuable than Facebook last month as investors sent the company soaring into the top five of the world's biggest firms.

WeChat has revolutionised China's tech industry and even daily life for millions of Chinese.

Source: AFP