This has done little to deter a growing list of other business moguls who have also expressed interest in acquiring the app, which has been under government scrutiny in the US for four years over alleged national security concerns stemming from its Chinese ownership. One of them is former Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin, who said earlier this week he too was assembling a group of investors to make a bid for TikTok. He first hinted about the plan in March before the divestiture bill passed into law.
Mnuchin told Bloomberg he understands that the Chinese government is unlikely to allow ByteDance to sell TikTokâs algorithm, but he planned to ârebuild the technology.â That would be quite a lofty endeavor, especially given that TikTok competitors like YouTube and Meta have been trying to copy its product for years with only mixed success.
Thereâs at least one existing business connection between Mnuchin and TikTok: They are both backed by Japanâs SoftBank, which has stakes in ByteDance and in Liberty Strategic Capital, the private equity firm Mnuchin set up after he left office. A representative from Liberty Strategic Capital did not immediately return a request for comment about Mnuchinâs TikTok acquisition strategy.
Former Activision CEO Bobby Kotick has reportedly considered buying TikTok as well. He even floated the idea to Zhang Yiming, the former CEO of ByteDance who retains a roughly 20 percent stake in the company, the Wall Street Journal reported in March. Around the same time, Canadian businessman and Shark Tank judge Kevin O’Leary told Fox News that the app is ânot going to get banned, âcause Iâm gonna buy it.â
OâLeary did not immediately return a request for comment about whether he was seriously interested in TikTok. Kotick could not be reached for comment.
All of TikTokâs potential suitors would be facing an uphill battle to close a deal. The first challenge will be raising enough money. Only a small number of the worldâs largest companies likely have enough cash on hand to acquire the app outright, and so far, they havenât publicly voiced an interest in the platform. Thatâs a big change from four years ago when then-president Donald Trump first tried to force ByteDance to sell TikTok. At the time, Microsoft, Oracle, and Walmart were among the most promising buyers for the app.
But the even bigger problem that investors face is the fact that TikTok doesnât seem to think a sale would even be possible, let alone desirable. In a lawsuit it filed against the US government last week, TikTok argued the divestiture bill violated the First Amendment and claimed severing its American operations from ByteDance was ânot commercially, technologically, or legally feasible.â
TikTok noted that the Chinese government has âmade clearâ that it would not permit the company to sell its recommendation algorithm to a foreign buyer, citing regulations that Beijing introduced after Trump first targeted TikTok in 2020. The measures put limits on the export of certain technologies such as âpersonal interactive data algorithms.â
Even if a sale were politically possible, TikTok argued the move would âdisconnect Americans from the rest of the global communityâ on the platform, in possibly the same way that the Chinese version of the app is restricted only to people in China. TikTok added that it would take a team of new engineers years to sift through its source code and âgain sufficient familiarityâ with it to run the app effectively.
A group of TikTok creators filed a separate lawsuit against the federal government earlier this week arguing that the divest bill violated their free speech rights. (TikTok is paying their legal fees.) Separating TikTok from ByteDance, they said, âis infeasible, as the company has stated and as the publicly available record confirms.â