• @LufyCZ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    61 year ago

    They’re a public company, they’re required by law to share financial info.

    Do you perhaps have better data though?

    • nicetriangle
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      1 year ago

      From what I understand that 70% they’re paying artists is from “profit.”

      And from another comment in this thread:

      Their last quarterly financial statements shows $65 million profit on $3.36 billion in revenue.

      And then you have stuff like this:

      https://techcrunch.com/2021/08/20/spotify-to-spend-1b-buying-its-own-stock/

      So lets assume they make $65 million in profit every quarter between when that article came out and April 21 2026 (the period the article states they were doing buybacks). I count 18 quarters in that period. So if my math is correct that is $1.17 billion in “profit” in the same period of time they plan to do $1 billion in stock buybacks. But artists are only getting 70% of said profits. So that’s about $819 million to artists in the same period of time Spotify is doing $1 billion in stock buybacks.

      So we have a mega corporation playing creative accounting and doing stock buybacks instead of paying artists more. Classic.

      • @crystal@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        lets assume they make $65 million in profit every quarter

        Where do you get this number from?

        Hasn’t Spotify been operating at a loss for most of its existence? Wouldn’t that mean they paid 0€ to its creators most quaters (if it was actually calculated off profit)?