iTunes has long been looked at as the loss leader, the bridge that links Apple’s (AAPL) assorted media products. It drives product sales and helps power iPods, iPhones, Apple TV and Mac multimedia. But that role of servitude hasn’t stopped it from turning into a significant force.
Apple announced today that the iTunes store crossed the 5 billion song barrier. That’s 5 billion songs sold, up a billion from the 4billion announced in January.
At 99cents a song, that means the store has generated nearly $5billion in music revenue. That’s $3.5billion to artists and labels and $1.5billion to Apple (based on widely estimated revenue sharing splits). That’s not too shabby for an auxiliary program that helps promote hardware sales.
As this graphic shows, the escalation in pace at which songs are selling isn’t bad either:

Even more impressive, however, might be the story surrounding video sales. Despite a market in infant stages, despite a general lack of bridge connecting PC to TV (Apple TV notwithstanding), Apple said customers are still either renting or buying 50k movies a day from iTunes. That translates to more than 18million movies distributed a year.
In revenue, at an average purchase price of $12.50 (New titles are sold at $14.99 and library titles at 9.99) and a rental price of $3.49 (rentals are either $2.99 or $3.99). The gross numbers start to add up:
To put that in perspective and lend a little color, Netflix (NFLX), a well established rental business catering to well entrenched and widely accepted technology (DVDs/DVD players) had quarterly movie video rental revenue of $326.2m in April. Apple’s potentially in reach of generating one fourth that revenue (per the same time period) in an infant market. That’s worth keeping an eye on.A 50/50 split of sales versus rentals, for example, yields $143.9m. If it skews 75/25 in favor of sales, the revenue ratchets up to $187.9million. Mix in TV sales, which aren’t included and have been doing better volume than movies, and you could add another $150 to $200m. That totals much as $387m on the high side.
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This article has 27 comments:
Blah Dah
Then, the chart would show a steepening, upward sloping curve with each billion milestone CLOSER to the previous milestone.
This would demonstrate that each billion milestone is occurring EARLIER than the previous milestone.
Blah Dah
Then, the chart would show a steepening, upward sloping curve with each billion milestone CLOSER to the previous milestone.
This would demonstrate that each billion milestone is occurring EARLIER than the previous milestone.
In other words, Apple has been consistently selling the next billion songs FASTER than the previous billion songs.
Elliott
this should serve as a future indicator of how Mac sales are going
:-)
C'ville
Very funny!
x
Apple has about 20 billion in cash. While Sprit has a market cap of about 22.5 billion, which makes it sound like Apple could finance a take over, the truth is that Sprint has an enterprise value of over 43 billion. Enterprise Value is general the amount required to start a take over bid. So there is no way for Apple to buy Sprint. They would never spend all their cash an borrow 23 billion on top of that.
States of
Generica
You realize there are other countries in the world outside the USA, right?
Hey look - customers shouldn't be trapped for life because 5 years ago the iPod was better than other MP3 players.
A few years ago - the US Congress mandated that cell phone companies must allow users to keep their cell phone numbers when they switch to another company. The reason? Companies were using an anti-competitive hurdle (the burden of changing cell phone numbers) as a way to trap customers into staying with their company.
This is basic stuff - Apple is using the success of iPods (and music from iTunes) as a way to propel sales in iPhones - and as a disincentive to buy non-Apple products. This is the same type of monopolistic activity that Microsoft did a few years back...
Apple was and still is REQUIRED by the record labels to provided DRM. Jobs has stated publicly that if the labels would let Apple sell their songs unlocked, they would.
Besides, Amazon now offers unlocked songs and so does iTunes for a minor premium. There are also programs and script codes to automatically strip the DRM from iTunes and other DRM'd songs. Apple's monopoly comes from quality, ease of use and design, not from anti-competative behaviour.
technology is moving faster than people realize. there will be more open platforms, everywhere. right now, innovation, tight controls by the music industry on it's licensing agreements with Apple, puts Apple ahead of the pack but also mandates some limits. Apple has a long way to go, and about 20 years worth dominance, to be in any monopoly ballpark with msf. if msf or anyone else can do better, it's an open competition.
Non one is stuck with iTunes songs. Simple burn a CD with the songs you want, then you can rip them back into iTunes or another program and use them on whatever MP3 player you want.
Once Apple puts a digital song online, it just rakes in the money. The only costs are the standard and constand cost of servers and bandwidth.