TikTok Global to launch public offering, Chinese parent firm says
TikTok Global plans to hold a public listing, its
Chinese parent company ByteDance said Monday, after announcing a deal over the
weekend that would avert a shutdown of the popular app in the US.
The agreement, which has been approved by Donald
Trump, sees Silicon Valley giant Oracle become the data partner for the
video-sharing platform while Walmart becomes a commercial partner, creating a
new US company called TikTok Global.
On Monday, ByteDance said in a statement on social
media that TikTok Global plans to launch a "small round of pre-IPO
financing", after which it would become an 80 percent-owned subsidiary of
ByteDance.
The company added that the board of directors of
TikTok Global includes ByteDance founder Zhang Yiming, along with its current
directors and the CEO of Walmart.
"TikTok Global will also launch a listing plan
to further enhance its corporate governance structure and transparency,"
the statement said. It did not say how much it intended to raise or where it
plans to list.
Bloomberg News reported that Bytedance was seeking a
valuation of $60 billion for TikTok, citing a person familiar with the matter.
TikTok -- which became a global phenomenon with its
brand of short, addictive phone videos -- has come under fire in recent months
as tensions escalate between China and the west.
Trump has claimed TikTok is collecting user data for
Beijing, without providing evidence, and in early August gave ByteDance until
September 20 to hand over TikTok's US operations to an American company.
ByteDance, under pressure in China not to give in to
US demands, set out to clarify "rumours" on Monday after details of
the deal were announced. It said the current plan "does not involve the
transfer of any algorithms and technologies".
While Oracle has the authority to check the source
code of TikTok in the US, ByteDance said displaying the source code is a way
for multinationals to allay local data security concerns.
ByteDance added that a "so-called tax payment
of $5 billion to the US Treasury" was a forecast of corporate income tax
and other operating taxes TikTok would need to pay for business development.



