Do Physical Music Copies Still Hold Value in the Streaming Era?
- Shingai Mhendurwa
- Jan 20
- 3 min read

Unveiling the Value: Music’s Evolution in a Digital World
Step into the pulse of the music industry’s most thrilling transformation. Once dominated by shelves lined with vinyl, CDs, and tapes, today’s music landscape is electrified by streaming platforms that transcend borders and redefine value. From Johannesburg’s vibrant creative hotspots to London’s legendary studios and New York’s bustling investment houses, the global music economy is no longer a simple melody—it’s an intricate symphony of technology, creativity, and finance.
For modern advisory firms in music accounting, IP valuation, and catalogue investments, the burning question echoes worldwide: Do physical music copies still hold material value in an era powered by streaming? The answer, while universal in direction, becomes a fascinating study of nuances, regulations, and opportunities across South Africa, the UK, and the United States.

From Vinyl to Virtual: Where Real Value Now Sings
Once, music’s lifeblood flowed through tangible formats—every unit sold was a note in an industry crescendo. Balance sheets swelled with inventories and the hum of distribution trucks. But today, the industry dances to a different rhythm: master recordings and publishing rights are now the true stars, prized as core intangible assets. Valuation models hinge on the promise of steady, global streaming income, their forecasts supported by mountains of listener data.
Behind the Scenes: Accounting in Three Markets
· Physical Music Copies (Vinyl, CDs, Tapes):
· South Africa & UK (IFRS / IAS 2): Physical music is classified as inventory, measured at cost or net realisable value, and constantly tested for obsolescence and impairment.
· United States (US GAAP): Similar treatment, with stock evaluated at lower of cost or market and prone to write-downs as streaming surges ahead.
The result? As digital dominance grows, the risk of inventory impairment rises in every jurisdiction, nudging physical formats further into the wings.
· Music Rights and Catalogues:
· South Africa & UK (IAS 38): Intangible assets, valued by their future economic benefits.
· United States (ASC 350): Recorded as intangible assets, typically facing impairment reviews rather than systematic amortisation.
No matter the continent, music IP now leads the parade of enterprise value, casting a long shadow over physical inventory.
Streaming Era: The Heartbeat of Modern Music Value
Streaming hasn’t just changed how we listen—it’s revolutionised how music is valued and invested in. Across South Africa, the UK, and the US, master recordings and publishing rights have become bankable assets, their worth measured by global reach and recurring revenue. Data-driven cash-flow projections empower investors, while regional flavour spices up the catalogue market:
· South Africa: Surging interest in African catalogues with international streaming pull.
· UK: A sophisticated market, rich in legacy artist assets and publishing prowess.
· US: The global giant, setting benchmarks for catalogue investment and valuation.
It’s no wonder IP valuation mandates for music catalogues are booming across these territories.
Where Physical Copies Still Shine: Niche Brilliance
While physical formats may no longer headline in valuation models, they haven’t left the stage entirely. Their star status now lies in select, strategic roles:
1. Vinyl: The Collector’s Dream
Vinyl isn’t just surviving—it’s thriving among collectors in the UK and US, and making waves in South African indie circles. For brand positioning and fan engagement, vinyl is the high-margin, cult-favourite encore that keeps audiences coming back for more.
2. Physical Music as Merchandise
Think limited editions, tour exclusives, and artist-signed treasures—physical releases now perform as coveted merch, generating buzz in US touring markets, UK legacy catalogues, and among South African artists reaching diaspora fans. For financial advisors, this revenue is the cherry on top, not the main feast.
3. Collectibles & Cultural Icons
Some physical copies ascend to legendary status, prized for their cultural significance, first pressings, or artist connections. Yet, their investment appeal remains elusive: illiquid, tough to price, and rarely found in institutional portfolios.
Investor Perspectives: A New Score of Value
Whether you’re in Cape Town, London, or New York, music investors sing the same refrain:
Asset | Investor View |
Music IP | Core valuation driver |
Streaming income | Primary cash flow |
Physical inventory | Non-core, operational risk |
Modern catalogue investments crave the longevity of streaming, global royalty flows, and tight control over rights. Warehouses full of records and CDs? They’re no longer the jackpot.
The Modern Music Value Hierarchy: Global Harmony
Across South Africa, the UK, and the US, the hierarchy is crystal clear:
· Intellectual property ignites value
· Streaming channels that value worldwide
· Physical formats amplify audience engagement



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