<p>Pop juggernaut <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/justin-bieber" target="_blank">Justin Bieber</a> has sold his music publishing and recording catalogue shares to the Blackstone-backed Hipgnosis Songs Capital for $200 million, the company said Tuesday -- marking the industry's latest blockbuster rights deal.</p>.<p>The sale has been rumoured for weeks and sees the 28-year-old join a who's who of artists who have cashed out recently on their catalogues.</p>.<p>Hipgnosis did not publicly disclose the terms of the deal, but a source close to the matter told AFP it was worth around $200 million.</p>.<p>Some relatively young contemporary stars including Justin Bieber and Shakira have sold large stakes in their work -- both of those celebrities also struck deals with Hipgnosis -- but the sales frenzy has primarily taken off with legacy artists like Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen.</p>.<p>The staggering sums -- Springsteen's catalogue went to Sony for a reported half a billion dollars -- are seen as safe bets both for older artists getting their finances in order and investors who can count on consistent returns from time-tested music.</p>.<p>Younger catalogues are seen as riskier territory, but Bieber is one of the best-selling artists of all time, and now Hipgnosis has his share in some of the 21st century's biggest hits including "Baby," "Sorry" and "Love Yourself."</p>.<p>Hipgnosis Songs Capital is a $1 billion venture between financial giant Blackstone and the British Hipgnosis Song Management.</p>.<p>According to the deal, Hipgnosis has acquired Bieber's publishing copyrights to his 290-song back catalogue -- all of his music released prior to December 31, 2021 -- including his writer's share.</p>.<p>It also includes his artist rights to his lucrative master recordings as well as neighbouring rights royalties -- a right that sees its owner receive a payment every time a song is played publicly.</p>.<p>But while Hipgnosis will receive the revenues, Bieber's longtime home Universal will continue to administer the catalogue, according to Variety.</p>.<p>After the Canada native was discovered on YouTube as a teen, Bieber skyrocketed to global fame, selling more than 150 million records.</p>.<p>He has charted eight number-one albums on Billboard's top albums list and has 82 million monthly listeners on the streaming platform Spotify, where his songs have been streamed more than 32 billion times alone.</p>.<p>"The impact of Justin Bieber on global culture over the last 14 years has truly been remarkable," said Hipgnosis chief Merck Mercuriadis in a statement.</p>.<p>"At only 28 years of age, he is one of a handful of defining artists of the streaming era that has revitalized the entire music industry, taking a loyal and worldwide audience with him on a journey from teen phenomenon to a culturally important artist."</p>
<p>Pop juggernaut <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/justin-bieber" target="_blank">Justin Bieber</a> has sold his music publishing and recording catalogue shares to the Blackstone-backed Hipgnosis Songs Capital for $200 million, the company said Tuesday -- marking the industry's latest blockbuster rights deal.</p>.<p>The sale has been rumoured for weeks and sees the 28-year-old join a who's who of artists who have cashed out recently on their catalogues.</p>.<p>Hipgnosis did not publicly disclose the terms of the deal, but a source close to the matter told AFP it was worth around $200 million.</p>.<p>Some relatively young contemporary stars including Justin Bieber and Shakira have sold large stakes in their work -- both of those celebrities also struck deals with Hipgnosis -- but the sales frenzy has primarily taken off with legacy artists like Bob Dylan and Bruce Springsteen.</p>.<p>The staggering sums -- Springsteen's catalogue went to Sony for a reported half a billion dollars -- are seen as safe bets both for older artists getting their finances in order and investors who can count on consistent returns from time-tested music.</p>.<p>Younger catalogues are seen as riskier territory, but Bieber is one of the best-selling artists of all time, and now Hipgnosis has his share in some of the 21st century's biggest hits including "Baby," "Sorry" and "Love Yourself."</p>.<p>Hipgnosis Songs Capital is a $1 billion venture between financial giant Blackstone and the British Hipgnosis Song Management.</p>.<p>According to the deal, Hipgnosis has acquired Bieber's publishing copyrights to his 290-song back catalogue -- all of his music released prior to December 31, 2021 -- including his writer's share.</p>.<p>It also includes his artist rights to his lucrative master recordings as well as neighbouring rights royalties -- a right that sees its owner receive a payment every time a song is played publicly.</p>.<p>But while Hipgnosis will receive the revenues, Bieber's longtime home Universal will continue to administer the catalogue, according to Variety.</p>.<p>After the Canada native was discovered on YouTube as a teen, Bieber skyrocketed to global fame, selling more than 150 million records.</p>.<p>He has charted eight number-one albums on Billboard's top albums list and has 82 million monthly listeners on the streaming platform Spotify, where his songs have been streamed more than 32 billion times alone.</p>.<p>"The impact of Justin Bieber on global culture over the last 14 years has truly been remarkable," said Hipgnosis chief Merck Mercuriadis in a statement.</p>.<p>"At only 28 years of age, he is one of a handful of defining artists of the streaming era that has revitalized the entire music industry, taking a loyal and worldwide audience with him on a journey from teen phenomenon to a culturally important artist."</p>