Kanye West seen surrendering $30 million with abrupt end of tour

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Kanye West is missing out on about $30 million in potential ticket sales after abruptly canceling the remaining dates of his Saint Pablo tour.

West had 21 dates left on his tour, according to Live Nation Entertainment, which sold tickets through Ticketmaster and promoted many of the dates. The hip-hop superstar had been taking in more than $1.4 million a night off of ticket sales alone, meaning he’s leaving about $30.2 million on the table, according to analysts.

The sudden cancellation of one of the year’s most popular concert tours is the latest surprise from one of the least predictable artists on the planet. The announcement from West and Live Nation came after a weekend of on-stage rants about the U.S. presidential election. After ending a show in Sacramento early Saturday night, he canceled a performance Sunday in the Los Angeles area.

West didn’t vote, he told the audience, but said he would have voted for President-elect Donald Trump. A decade earlier, West said Republican President George W. Bush didn’t care about black people because of the administration’s lackluster response to Hurricane Katrina.

West and Live Nation declined to give a reason for calling off the tour Monday, saying only that “the remaining dates on the Saint Pablo Tour have been canceled. Tickets will be fully refunded at point of purchase.” The tour, set to conclude Dec. 31, had future stops in New York City, Philadelphia, Detroit, Boston and Washington, among others.

The tour was one of the top sellers of the fall, according to Gary Bongiovanni, editor-in-chief of industry publication Pollstar. Saint Pablo shows have grossed $30.3 million so far this year, he said. West has performed 21 shows in 13 cities, averaging $2.4 million per city.

In 2013, the last time West went on tour, the rapper registered the 36th biggest tour in North America, posting more than $30 million in ticket sales across 27 performances.

“His business has been excellent,” Bongiovanni said. “There is no financial motivation for canceling. I’m sure Live Nation didn’t want it canceled.”

Live Nation will miss out on sales of tickets, food and advertising. Yet an arena tour is unlikely large enough to dent earnings for the concert giant, which put on more than 6,000 shows in the most recent quarter.

West’s liability is less clear. Artists take home the lion’s share of ticket sales, and are responsible for the cost of the tour. Insurance protects the artist and promoter from disasters and with no reason given for the cancellation, West’s total losses are unknown.

(c) 2016, Bloomberg ยท Lucas Shaw

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