The Chicago Entrepreneur

Tencent Music stock jumps after J.P. Morgan recommends investors buy

The U.S.-listed shares of Tencent Music Entertainment Group surged 3.6% in afternoon trading Tuesday, after J.P. Morgan recommended investors buy into the China-based streaming music and audio entertainment company, as the online music business has evolved from being a cost center to a profit driver. Analyst Alex Yao raised his rating to overweight, after being at neutral for the past 15 months, while boosting his stock price target to $7.70 from $4.80. As Tencent’s online music business has grown from 32% of total revenue with gross profit margin (GPM) in the low-teens percentage range in 2020, to 47% of revenue at mid-20s GPM in the third quarter, “we believe online music has finally become a key financial driver for the group, thanks to a multi-dimensional monetization model and efficiency improvement,” Yao wrote in a note to clients. “In addition, we expect the segment will increasingly become a profit driver for the group in the next few years.” The stock has soared 29.2% over the past three months, while the Invesco Golden Dragon China ETF has tumbled 19.2% and the S&P 500 has slipped 3.5%.

Market Pulse Stories are Rapid-fire, short news bursts on stocks and markets as they move. Visit MarketWatch.com for more information on this news.

Previous post Biden administration to extend payment pause on student loans after June or until legal challenges resolve
Next post VC firm Sequoia apologizes to limited partners for $150 million FTX loss: WSJ