BTS during an interview with host Jimmy Fallon on September 25, 2018.
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South Korean pop stars are smashing records, performing at premier music festivals in the West and topping charts — but that stratospheric success is not mirrored in the stock performance of their management agencies.
South Korea’s “Big Four” K-pop agencies are all publicly listed. Hybe Corporation is the largest and listed on the blue-chip Kospi, while SM Entertainment, JYP Entertainment and YG Entertainment are on the small-cap Kosdaq. So far this year, Hybe shares have plunged 29%, SM lost 36%, while YG plummeted 37%. The largest loser is JYP Entertainment, which has more than halved since the start of the year, falling 56%.
The declines are puzzling as K-pop artists solidify the industry’s position on the global music stage, breaking records on YouTube, Spotify and even Billboard Charts.
Statistics provided by Spotify to CNBC revealed that since 2018, K-pop streams on the platform have skyrocketed more than 180% in the United States, over 420% in Southeast Asia and over 360% worldwide, as of Sept. 3.
The music streaming service also said that in 2023 alone, South Korean artists were discovered by first-time listeners nearly 2.2 billion times on Spotify.
“Even if you didn’t know my name, you may know BTS and Blackpink,” South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol said to a joint session of Congress in April 2023.
CHICAGO, ILLINOIS – AUGUST 03: (L – R) Danielle, Hyein, Hanni, Minji and Haerin of NewJeans perform in concert during Lollapalooza at Grant Park on August 03, 2023 in Chicago, Illinois.
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Boy group BTS is the best-selling act in South Korean history, and girl group Blackpink became the first K-pop act to perform at the Coachella in 2019. Blackpink is also the first South Korean band to headline a major U.K. music festival, performing at London’s BST Hyde Park festival in 2023. Rookie group NewJeans and boy group Stray Kids have also performed at Lollapalooza this year.
‘Complex’ headwinds
At the same time, earnings have declined among the Big Four, with each recording year-on-year operating losses in the second quarter. YG’s operating profit plunged 94.5%, while that of JYP tumbled 79.6%. SM and Hybe recorded smaller declines of 30.7% and 37.4%, respectively.
Profits tumbled as South Korean media reported album export sales declined for the first time in nine years in the first half of 2024. Similarly, the Seoul Economic Daily reported in July that the Big Four’s first-half album shipments fell to 44.74 million, down from 53.45 million in first half of 2023.
Physical sales have historically accounted for the lion’s share of a label’s revenue, Kim said, and has also been the most profitable segment. High physical sales, she explained, represent the number of fans, which, by extension, quantifies the addressable market for a company.
One unique element of the South Korean entertainment industry are “fansigns,” where fans enter a lottery to meet the artist and get their album signed. The lottery allots higher odds to fans who buy more physical albums within a specific window, raising their chances of attending the fansign and meeting the artist.
Simply put, the more albums one buys, the more entries one gets for a fansign. As such, these events incentivize fans to buy more albums even in a streaming era.
Declining physical album sales not only hits earnings, but also raises questions about whether the investment thesis of “continual high growth” has collapsed.