New York Post

BEIJING IN BID TO THWART TIKTALKS

New export rules

- By NOAH MANSKAR

China appears to be wrapping TikTok in red tape in an effort to thwart President Trump’s order to divest the video-sharing app’s US operations from its Chinese parent company by mid-November or see it shut down.

The Chinese Ministry of Commerce added 23 items on Friday to a list of technologi­es that require Beijing’s OK before they can be exported. They reportedly include artificial-intelligen­ce technology that plays a key role for TikTok, which uses an algorithm to feed users a stream of videos based on their preference­s and behavior.

That means TikTok’s Beijingbas­ed parent company, ByteDance, will likely have to go through the new licensing procedure to transfer its software code out of China to the US as part of any sale, according to Wedbush Securities analyst Daniel Ives.

“This is clearly directed at slowing down ByteDance’s deal negotiatio­ns in this game of high stakes poker,” Ives said in a Monday note.

The move forced ByteDance to parse the new regulation­s over the weekend, when it was expected to start exclusive negotiatio­ns with one of the suitors for TikTok, The Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.

Still, CNBC reported on Monday that TikTok had chosen a buyer for its businesses in the US, New Zealand and Australia and could announce a deal as soon as Tuesday.

A joint bid from Microsoft and Walmart is considered the leading contender, but other suitors reportedly include software giant Oracle and rival video app Triller, which claimed on Friday that it had made a $20 billion bid with Centricus Asset Management. ByteDance denied that it had been in talks with Triller.

“We are studying the new regulation­s that were released Friday,” ByteDance general counsel Erich Andersen told The Post in a statement. “As with any cross-border transactio­n, we will follow the applicable laws, which in this case include those of the US and China.”

Shares in TikTok’s suitors tumbled on Monday on news of the potential regulatory hurdle. Microsoft’s shares closed down 1.5 percent, at $225.53, while Walmart’s slid 1 percent, to $138.85, and Oracle’s shares dropped about 1.1 percent, to $57.22.

China’s new rules added another geopolitic­al dimension to TikTok’s blockbuste­r negotiatio­ns. Trump has threatened to ban the app amid concerns that Americans’ user data could be shared with Beijing, charges that TikTok has denied.

Trump issued an executive order on Aug. 14 giving ByteDance 90 days to divest TikTok’s US operations.

China’s state-backed Xinhua news agency published an article on Sunday claiming ByteDance will have to follow the export rules to sell TikTok’s US operations, a process that kicked off after Trump signed an earlier executive order banning the app on privacy concerns.

Trump and other US officials have raised fears that ByteDance could share users’ data with China’s government.

Xinhua added that the developmen­t of ByteDance’s internatio­nal businesses “has been built on the strong technical support based in China.”

 ??  ?? Beijing has tightened its rules on exporting technology, possibly creating a new hurdle for efforts by TikTok’s Chinese owner to sell off the app’s US operations. Red tape
Beijing has tightened its rules on exporting technology, possibly creating a new hurdle for efforts by TikTok’s Chinese owner to sell off the app’s US operations. Red tape

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