Warner Music $3 billion buyout could be done this week:

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Reuters) - Final buyout bids for Warner Music Group are due on Monday and the company could be sold by the end of the week in a deal valued at over $3 billion, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The third round of bids is led by two competing financial groups Len Blavatnik's Access Industry and a joint bid by Tom and Alec Gores' Platinum Equity and Gores Group, according two people.

The Warner Music sale process is taking place against a backdrop of ongoing declines in music sales as executives struggle to figure out new business models to guarantee the future of the industry. While Warner Music continues to generate reasonable levels of cash on its balance sheet -- a key metric for investors -- it will still be seen as a risky investment in a very tough market.

Two weeks ago the second-round bids came in around $3 billion according to three people who asked not to be named as the process is confidential. Ron Burkle's Yucaipa Co, dropped out of the bidding late last week, the first person said.

Matching bids from two major music names fell short of what Warner's board was looking for from strategic buyers in the second round but there is still a chance that rival music companies will be involved at a later stage in picking over some of Warner Music assets.

While the final round bids are due early this week, there is no certainty a deal will get done, the first person said.

All of the parties declined to comment.

Warner Music's board effectively put itself up for sale in January when it appointed Goldman Sachs and AGM Partners to assess interest from external parties. Since then its shares have risen nearly 60 percent to $7.47 at the end last week.

One reason why the Warner Music board is open to moving ahead with financial bidders is because it fears an expensive delay in the process by regulators if the company is bought by another music company, the first source said.

Regulators have scuppered music deals in the past including at least one of several attempts to combine Warner Music and EMI over the last decade. Warner's board, led by Chief Executive Edgar Bronfman, had demanded a premium from the music companies for their second-round bids.

BMG Music Rights, a joint music venture between German media giant Bertelsmann and private equity firm KKR, gave up on staying in the bidding process early last week declining to raise its bid any higher.

BMG Music could still be involved in the process said a third person, but it is now likely to wait till the end to see who wins out and then try to see what publishing assets it might be able to buy from the new owners.

Sony Corp is also still on the sidelines of the process, according to another person. But it faces the same high hurdles from Warner's board.

"The key issues for Warner Music's board are price and simplicity of the transaction process," said one of the people familiar with the talks.

GOOD VALUE

Music companies say they have the upper hand in the long-run. Compared to financial buyers, lenders favor company bids in such leveraged buyouts.

Warner Music Group is highly leveraged with around $1.1 billion in equity and $1.9 billion in debt. It is expected to generate around $333 million in earnings before interest, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) in fiscal year 2012 according to Thomson Reuters data. This means Warner Music is currently being valued at around nine times future earnings.

Music companies believe they could cut tens of millions of dollars in annual costs by combining with Warner helping to lower the valuation multiple to much lower than eight times thereby making it a less risky bet for lenders.

One likely outcome of the process is that whoever wins Warner Music will probably also make bid for EMI Group and take advantage of the potentially huge value that could be created by cutting costs across in a combined company, say industry watchers.

EMI is currently owned by Citigroup. Citigroup is expected to put the music company up for sale in the near future after taking control from private equity firm Terra Firma in February.

(http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/01/us-warnermusic-idUSTRE7402S420110501
 
Blavatnik bought Warner:
http://blogs.wsj.com/deals/2011/05/06/worlds-newest-music-mogul-who-is-len-blavatnik/



By Shira Ovide

The conglomerate controlled by Len Blavatnik, the Russian-born billionaire, has been declared the winner of an auction for Warner Music Group.

Len Blavatnik

Billionaires previously have run into trouble owning record labels. Private-equity maven Guy Hands’s 2007 purchase of EMI was an embarrassing dud. EMI, the record label behind the Beatles, was repossessed by Citigroup after the company couldn’t pay its debts.

Here’s hoping Blavatnik has better luck with Warner Music, the record label and music publisher behind music of Aretha Franklin, the White Stripes and T.I. Here is a look at Blavatnik’s life and career.

His rags-to-riches story: Blavatnik was born in the Soviet Union and immigrated to the U.S. in 1978 with his family. Blavatnik made a splash in U.S. real estate, went back to Russia in the 1990s and joined a wave of entrepreneurs who bought up assets being privatized by government. Blavatnik became a major owner of an aluminum business, and he invested in oil company TNK. In 2003, he and other TNK investors sold half of the business to BP PLC in an $8 billion deal. Blavatnik, now a U.S. citizen, has a net worth of $10.1 billion, according to Forbes, which makes him the 80th richest person in the world.

No stranger to star-studded business: Blavatnik bought the U.K. arm of Mel Gibson’s film distribution business back in 2009. Blavatnik last year also weighed a bid for debt-ravaged movie studio Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. (He didn’t get it.) Blavatnik’s Access Industries also owns a stake in Tory Burch, a fashion label.

Latest scandal: Blavatnik struck a deal in 2007 to buy chemicals company Lyondell for $12.7 billion. The company collapsed into bankruptcy, and creditors are going to court to claw back money from the failed deal.

Philanthropy: Blavatnik’s favorite targets for donations include the British Museum and Tate Modern in London, and New York’s Museum of Modern Art. Last year, Blavatnik agreed to donate £75 million to set up a school of government at the University of Oxford in the U.K.

Sports gig: Blavatnik owns a controlling stake in Perform Group, which broadcasts English soccer, tennis and other sports over the Web, and runs websites for sports teams and leagues.

Crash pads: Blavatnik paid $50 million to buy a Manhattan townhouse from Warner Music CEO Edgar Bronfman Jr. The house featured an indoor piazza with a Nigerian fertility statue. He also paid a reported £41 million for a pad in the posh Kensington area of London in 2004.

What’s next? Speculation has swirled that Blavatnik could combine Warner with EMI, which is expected to be up for sale soon.
 
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