The popular social media platform TikTok has finalized an ownership restructuring that establishes a majority American-owned entity through a process requiring coordination between US and Chinese governments alongside commercial negotiations. The announcement Thursday demonstrates how diplomatic and business channels worked together to resolve the standoff.
ByteDance, the Chinese parent company of TikTok, has agreed to a structure reducing its ownership to 19.9%, while American investors assume controlling interest with 80.1% of the company. Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX share equal 15% ownership, with Michael Dell’s investment firm participating. The deal required not just commercial agreement among investors but also diplomatic coordination between governments with competing interests.
This resolution emerged from a complex process involving congressional legislation, Supreme Court litigation, presidential executive orders, commercial negotiations among potential investors, and diplomatic discussions between US and Chinese officials. Chinese government approval was necessary for ByteDance to divest a valuable asset, while US government approval was needed to certify compliance with legislation. President Trump’s public thanks to Chinese President Xi Jinping acknowledges the diplomatic dimension alongside commercial aspects.
Leadership of the American entity will be entrusted to Adam Presser as CEO, emerging from a process that balanced American demands for independent leadership with practical needs for smooth transition. The company will be overseen by a seven-member board with American majority and cybersecurity experts, a governance structure satisfying US requirements. Shou Chew participates as a board member, representing continuity acceptable to all parties.
The new US entity implements comprehensive safeguards including data protection, algorithm security, enhanced moderation, and software integrity measures that satisfy American national security requirements while preserving platform viability important to both commercial and diplomatic interests. Both governments have approved the arrangement, with official confirmation underscoring the diplomatic coordination required alongside commercial negotiations to resolve the regulatory standoff.
TikTok Resolves Regulatory Standoff Through Diplomatic and Commercial Coordination
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