Advertisement
Tech

Hangzhou style? Alibaba’s music arm chases slice of K-pop pie with US$30 million investment in South Korea’s SM Entertainment

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
A caricature of South Korean singer Psy is shown against his national flag, the T’aegukki. Psy’s ‘Gangnam Style’ helped put K-pop on the world map after it went viral on YouTube in 2012, but it is the leggy girl groups and makeup-caked boy bands that have fuelled most of the genre’s success. Now Ali Music wants in on the action. Illustration: Stephen Case
Bien Perez

E-commerce powerhouse Alibaba Group may be going “Gangnam Style” as it invests KRW35.5 billion (about US$29.5 million) to take a minority stake in SM Entertainment, operator of one of the biggest record labels in South Korea’s booming K-pop industry.

That deal is part of a strategic partnership announced yesterday between Alibaba Music Group, a subsidiary of New York-traded Alibaba, and SM Entertainment in the areas of online music distribution and e-commerce in mainland China.

Advertisement

“The investment will pave the way for extensive collaboration between SM Entertainment and our music business flagship, Alibaba Music Group, that will harness our diversified platforms to better serve the customers in our ecosystem,” an Alibaba spokeswoman said.

READ MORE: Hong Kong’s post-1997 search for identity helped rise of K-pop, says South Korean consul

Ali Music was established last year as one of the main pillars of the ambitious digital entertainment strategy drawn up by Alibaba, based in Hangzhou in eastern Zhejiang province.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x