Michael Jackson said near deal to avert bankruptcy
Posted on: Thursday, 13 April 2006, 10:15 CDT
By Claudia Parsons
NEW YORK -- Michael Jackson is close to a deal that would help him to avert bankruptcy by refinancing his debts and possibly selling part of his interest in scores of hits by The Beatles, The New York Times said on Thursday.
The paper, citing people briefed on the plan, said the ongoing negotiations to refinance hundreds of millions of dollars of loans would require him at some point in the future to offer Sony Corp. part of his interest in a song catalog that includes many of The Beatles best-known songs.
Jackson, who was cleared last June of criminal charges of sexually abusing a young boy at his Neverland Valley Ranch, has spent much of his time since the trial in Bahrain.
Prosecutors asserted during Jackson's child molestation trial the pop singer was in precarious financial shape due to mounting debts.
He narrowly escaped legal action by the state of California earlier this year for failing to pay employees at his ranch. California's labor commissioner had fined Jackson $100,000 and threatened to sue the 47-year-old entertainer unless he made good on at least $306,000 in back wages dating to December. He paid the salaries last month.
The former child star who became one of the biggest pop stars in the world, selling an estimated 300 million albums, had been increasingly under scrutiny even before the trial as media attention turned to his eccentric lifestyle and dramatic changes in his physical appearance.
The trial was an international media circus with Jackson facing nearly two decades in prison if convicted of 10 counts of lewd acts with a child, giving a minor alcohol and conspiring to commit child abduction, extortion and false imprisonment. He was cleared on all counts.
SONY DEAL
Jackson bought the ATV catalog, which included more than 200 songs written by members of The Beatles, for $48 million in 1985. He caused some controversy when he subsequently licensed their 1968 song "Revolution" to a Nike commercial.
In 1995, Sony and Jackson formed a joint venture combining Sony Music Publishing and the ATV Music Publishing catalog, which also includes thousands more songs by the likes of Little Richard, Bob Dylan and Elvis Presley.
Music publishing is one of the most lucrative areas in the music industry and involves the exploitation of song copyrights. A copyright owner receives royalties each time a song is broadcast or performed. Fees also accrue if the song is recorded or licensed, say, for an advertisement.
According to The New York Times, under the plan being discussed, Jackson would agree to provide Sony with an option to buy about 25 percent of the catalog, or half of his stake, at a set price.
The paper said Jackson had used his stake in the catalog as collateral for about $270 million in loans that were sold last year to a New York-based investment company. The paper said the entire catalog is valued at about $1 billion.
It said Sony had an interest in keeping Jackson solvent because if he is forced into bankruptcy, the stake in the publishing company could go up for auction, opening it up to another company to bid for it.
A Sony spokeswoman said she could not say when or if there would be any announcement. Jackson's representatives did not immediately return calls for comment.
(Additional reporting by Yinka Adegoke, Ransdell Pierson, Tiffany Wu)
Source: REUTERS
Related Articles
- Sony Premieres New 'Club Dates' Series of Music Concerts in Digital Cinema Theaters
- Rowland Coffee Roaster's Gourmet Espresso Brand, Cafe Bustelo, and Sony Masterworks Brew New Deal Serving Cuban Music Group Tiempo Libre On a Million Cans of Coffee
- From Country Ballads to Pop Hits, Verizon Wireless Releases List of Top V CAST Music Songs
- EMI Music and Sony ATV Sign on to Groundbreaking 'MySpace Music' Joint Venture Alongside SONY BMG MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT, Universal Music Group, and Warner Music Group
- Whale Song Heard In New York City Waters
- MXTabs.Net Partners With Sony/ATV, Alfred Publishing and EMI Christian Music Group
- ASCAP Publishes Groundbreaking Position Paper, "Music Copyright in the Digital Age"
- Sony BMG Releases First Song That Works With All Music Players
- Fidelis Launches Animated Ad for Alito Hearings; Satirical Look at Hearings A Parody of Sound of Music Song
- Michael Jackson sued for $48 million in New York
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds