The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

TikTok owner may sell stake over U.S. fears

- By Zheping Huang, Lulu Yilun Chen and Peter Elstrom

China’s ByteDance Inc. created one of the country’s rare global hits with the addictive video app TikTok. Now the U.S. government is threatenin­g that success as officials in Washington warn the service presents a security threat.

The Beijing-based company, led by Chief Executive Officer Yiming Zhang, is weighing a range of options to address those concerns, according to people familiar with the matter. Advisers are pitching everything from an aggressive legal defense and operationa­l separation for TikTok to sale of a majority stake, said the people, asking not to be named because the discussion­s are private. Selling more than half the business could raise substantia­lly more than $10 billion, one person said.

ByteDance would prefer to maintain full control of the business, given its soaring popularity and profit potential. It may argue that TikTok presents no security threat or that the U.S. has no legal standing over the business.

ByteDance has considered selling a chunk of TikTok if necessary to protect the value of the business, the people said. The most likely sale scenario would be for the company to sell a majority stake to financial investors, one person said. Earlier investors include SoftBank Group Corp., Sequoia Capital and Susquehann­a Internatio­nal Group.

Talks about TikTok’s future are preliminar­y, and no formal decision has been made, the people said. A representa­tive for the company said there have been no discussion­s about any partial or full sale of TikTok. “These rumors are completely meritless,” the representa­tive said.

ByteDance has emerged as the world’s most valuable startup on the explosive popularity of TikTok, where more than a billion, largely young, users share short clips of lip-syncing and dance videos. But with escalating tensions between China and the U.S., American politician­s have warned the app represents a national security threat and urged an investigat­ion.

The Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S., better known as CFIUS, has begun a review of ByteDance’s 2017 purchase of the business that became TikTok, Bloomberg News reported in November.

“I remain deeply concerned that any platform or applicatio­n that has Chinese ownership or direct links to China, such as TikTok, can be used as a tool by the Chinese Communist Party to extend its authoritar­ian censorship of informatio­n outside China’s borders and amass data on millions of unsuspecti­ng users,” Sen. Marco Rubio wrote in a letter to the Treasury Department, which chairs CFIUS.

TikTok has said it strives to create a safe and positive online environmen­t. “We are not influenced by any foreign government, including the Chinese government; TikTok does not operate in

China, nor do we have any intention of doing so in the future,” the company said in October.

It’s not clear whether U.S. regulators have authority in the case. CFIUS historical­ly has reviewed foreign companies’ investment­s in the U.S., including acquisitio­ns, for national security concerns, but Musical.ly, the app that would become TikTok, was a Shanghai-headquarte­red business when ByteDance purchased it two years ago for about $800 million. ByteDance didn’t seek CFIUS approval at the time, perhaps because it was a deal between two Chinese companies, even though the app had a substantia­l following in the U.S.

ByteDance may have a legal argument that the U.S. committee doesn’t have legal standing to force a divestitur­e, as it did in the case of the gay dating app Grindr. Beijing Kunlun Tech Co. acquired the U.S. app in January 2018, but in May CFIUS required the company to sell off the service no later than June 2020 because it could give foreigners access to sensitive data. ByteDance may also be able to argue that its data is less sensitive or that all operations and data could be quarantine­d in a separate U.S. subsidiary. The Trump administra­tion broadened CFIUS’ powers last year.

The advantage to selling a stake quickly would be to reap profits from TikTok’s success now, rather than risk a deteriorat­ion in value if the U.S. takes punitive measures. ByteDance prefers financial backers rather than strategic investors, like a music or media company, to avoid conflicts in the future, one person said.

Though ByteDance has become synonymous with TikTok, its business goes well beyond the music-oriented video app. Zhang founded the business in 2012 as a laboratory for the country’s leading artificial intelligen­ce engineers to come up with innovative products. His first hit was a news app called Jinri Toutiao, or Today’s Headlines, which spawned dozens of copycats from rivals.

In China, Zhang is the rare entreprene­ur who has kept his independen­ce from the country’s twin giants, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd. and Tencent Holdings Ltd. Indeed, he built a reputation for raiding China’s establishe­d tech giants for talent, paying premium compensati­on of $1 million or more a year.

Toutiao became a model for how ByteDance could generate profit, creating a mobile experience that’s a cross between Google and Facebook for would-be advertiser­s. The startup reached a valuation of $75 billion last year, according to CB Insights.

TikTok was one of the most popular apps in the world last year, with 656 million installs, according to Sensor Tower. It’s on track to surpass that total this year, the research firm said. The U.S. has had about 124 million downloads.

In October, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York and Republican Sen. Tom Cotton of Arkansas wrote to the acting director of National Intelligen­ce, referring to TikTok as a “potential counterint­elligence threat we cannot ignore.” They said their concerns include the safety of data on the platform and possible foreign influence campaigns in the U.S.

“A company compromise­d by the Chinese Communist Party knows where your children are, knows what they look like, what their voices sound like, what they’re watching and what they share with each other,” Sen. Josh Hawley said during a hearing in November. “All it takes is one knock on the door of their parent company, based in China, from a Communist Party official, for that data to be transferre­d to the Chinese government’s hands whenever they need it.”

Even Facebook Inc. Chief Executive Officer Mark Zuckerberg called out TikTok, citing privacy and freedom of speech concerns after the Chinese firm allegedly scrubbed its platform of politicall­y sensitive content, such as videos of pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong. TikTok, which has denied those allegation­s, announced in October it has formed a team that includes two former U.S. lawmakers to review its content moderation policy. It also said U.S. data is beyond the reach of China’s government.

“We store all TikTok US user data in the United States, with backup redundancy in Singapore,” it said in the October post. “Our data centers are located entirely outside of China, and none of our data is subject to Chinese law.”

ByteDance has been building TikTok’s operations in the U.S., hiring hundreds and establishi­ng American data centers to quarantine local informatio­n. It has also begun bringing on lobbyists in Washington, seeking to hire a U.S. policy chief and retaining the public affairs and lobbying firm Monument Advocacy, Bloomberg News reported last month.

Zhang has hoped ByteDance would be able to retain full control of TikTok by splitting off the U.S. business operationa­lly, one person said. But it’s not clear whether that will be enough given the continued political pressure.

“While it tried to run its overseas operation independen­tly from its China operation, given that the overseas operation is eventually held by the same entity that owns the China operation, it is hard to say that it is completely out of influence from the Chinese government,” said Ke Yan, a Singapore-based analyst with Aequitas Research.

A TikTok stake sale would likely push back any initial public offering for ByteDance. The company has considered an IPO in the U.S. or Hong Kong as soon as next year but still needs to beef up its internatio­nal operations and hire a chief financial officer. Selling equity in TikTok would provide the parent company with more cash and delay the need for a capital fundraisin­g.

Zhang and his investors would likely see benefits in buying more time for an IPO, given the U.S.-China trade war and recent stumbles by high profile startups such as WeWork and Uber Technologi­es Inc. SoftBank is a backer of all three companies and just engineered a bailout for WeWork.

ByteDance is the world’s most valuable startup on the popularity of TikTok, where more than a billion users share clips of lip-syncing and dance videos.

 ?? GILLES SABRI / BLOOMBERG ?? ByteDance is now synonymous with TikTok, but its business goes well beyond the music-oriented video app. Zhang Yiming founded the business in 2012 as a lab for China’s top AI engineers to create innovative products.
GILLES SABRI / BLOOMBERG ByteDance is now synonymous with TikTok, but its business goes well beyond the music-oriented video app. Zhang Yiming founded the business in 2012 as a lab for China’s top AI engineers to create innovative products.
 ?? SHIHO FUKADA / BLOOMBERG ?? TikTok was one of the most popular apps in the world last year, with 656 million installs, according to Sensor Tower. It’s on track to surpass that total this year, the research firm said. The U.S. has had about 124 million downloads.
SHIHO FUKADA / BLOOMBERG TikTok was one of the most popular apps in the world last year, with 656 million installs, according to Sensor Tower. It’s on track to surpass that total this year, the research firm said. The U.S. has had about 124 million downloads.

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