Research Article

Strategic Financial Architecture of International Stadium-Level Touring: Revenue Diversification, Risk Mitigation, And Scalability in Live Music Events

Authors

  • Egorova Alla Financial Strategist, Russia

Abstract

Stadium-level international touring has emerged as the central profit generator for the global music live entertainment industry. However, the underlying financial architecture of stadium-level international touring is largely understudied. This paper proposes and tests a new theoretical framework for a strategic financial architecture for stadium-level international touring consisting of four interdependent pillars: revenue diversification, cost and logistics discipline, risk management, and leverage scalability. Using an explanatory sequential mixed-method multiple case-study design, this study examines empirical evidence obtained through 28 semi-structured interviews with high-ranking industry executives, financial documents, and a fan expenditure survey (N=1,247). The empirical findings show that the proposed architecture results in a consistent profit margin of 28–35%, net artist take-home earnings of 47% of total gross, and ancillary revenue of 22–34%. Furthermore, residency-hybrid tour strategies have resulted in 39% savings in logistics expenses, while a layered hedging strategy has kept currency fluctuation below 1.8%. Moreover, leveraging digital and metaverse platforms has produced marginal scalability of nearly 100%. This research contributes to the body of knowledge in cultural economics and event management literature by offering a comprehensive financial architecture framework for stadium-level international touring rather than focusing solely on fragmented studies.

Article information

Journal

Journal of Business and Management Studies

Volume (Issue)

8 (7)

Pages

56-70

Published

2026-05-16

Downloads

Views

12

Downloads

1

Keywords:

Strategic financial architecture, stadium touring economics, revenue diversification, risk mitigation, live music scalability, ancillary revenue, mixed-methods case study, metaverse extensions