Here's a fun fact about viral fame: it doesn't always pay the bills the way you'd expect. "Baby Shark Dance" has racked up 16.4 billion views on YouTube, owned by Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL), making it the most-watched video in the platform's history. That's billion with a B. And yet Pinkfong, the South Korean company behind this earworm that has haunted parents worldwide for nearly a decade, pulled in just $67 million in total revenue last year, according to the Wall Street Journal.
To put that in perspective, those numbers feel shockingly modest for a cultural phenomenon available in 25 languages with audiences spanning from the United States (which leads in views) to Brazil (which delivers the most likes). So what gives?
The YouTube Kids Problem
The gap between viral success and actual earnings comes down to YouTube's strict "Made for Kids" rules. Back in 2019, YouTube settled with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission over violations of the Children's Online Privacy Protection Act. The result? YouTube had to ban personalized ads on kids' content and disable features like comments and notifications on children's videos.
That regulatory crackdown severely limits how much money creators can make from children's content. Garrett Johnson, a Boston University researcher, estimates that without these restrictions, "Baby Shark" could be generating two to three times more revenue for Pinkfong. In other words, the company is potentially leaving tens of millions of dollars on the table, not by choice, but because of compliance requirements.
Going Public Anyway
Despite the monetization challenges, Pinkfong is pushing forward. After delaying its IPO back in 2019, the company finally went public on South Korea's Kosdaq. Shares rose about 37% to roughly $36 each in Tuesday midmorning trading, giving Pinkfong a market value of $504 million.
The company earned approximately $13 million in operating profit last year, and it's planning to use IPO proceeds to fund new content. Pinkfong has three new titles in the works, expected to launch by 2028, as it tries to replicate the Baby Shark magic without relying solely on YouTube ad revenue.
The Bigger Picture
This whole situation highlights an uncomfortable truth about digital content creation in the kids' space. You can have literally billions of eyeballs watching your content and still struggle to convert that attention into meaningful revenue when platform rules and privacy regulations constrain your options.
For Alphabet (GOOG), the parent company of YouTube, these restrictions are just the cost of regulatory compliance. But for creators like Pinkfong, it means building business models that rely heavily on merchandise, licensing deals, and other revenue streams beyond ad dollars.
At least Pinkfong now has public market capital to work with. Whether that's enough to turn Baby Shark into a sustainable media empire remains to be seen, but at a $504 million valuation, investors seem willing to bet on the company's ability to swim beyond its one massive hit.