China’s Tencent said to have turned to Singapore’s GIC, sovereign funds to rescue Universal Music deal

  • Tencent has turned to Singapore’s state investor GIC and other soverign funds to help rescue a deal to buy a stake in Vivendi’s Universal Music, sources said
  • The deal would mark one of the biggest investments by a Chinese company into a major European media business

A Tencent sign is seen at the World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, China on October 20, 2019. File photo: Reuters

Tencent Holdings has turned to Singapore’s state investor GIC and other sovereign funds to help rescue a deal to buy a stake in Vivendi’s Universal Music after major buyout funds quit the negotiating table, sources said.

Vivendi, controlled by billionaire Vincent Bollore, had initially revealed talks with Tencent in August to sell part of Universal Music Group (UMG), the music label of artists such as Lady Gaga, the Beatles, Taylor Swift, Drake and Kendrick Lamar.

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