When the dust settles on TikTok’s ownership transition, the US government may emerge as its single biggest financial beneficiary — collecting $10 billion from the investors who acquired the platform’s American operations from ByteDance. Oracle, UAE’s MGX, and Silver Lake completed the acquisition in January, paying $2.5 billion upfront to the Treasury with further payments committed until the full $10 billion total is reached. It is a financial outcome with no precedent in the history of US government involvement in private corporate deals.
The deal’s national security foundation was bipartisan and well-documented. Congress had spent years building a case against ByteDance’s Chinese ownership of TikTok, ultimately passing legislation that gave ByteDance a stark choice. Trump’s administration guided the final execution of the transition, with a September executive order formalizing the new ownership structure. The president highlighted the American ownership of the restructured platform as a core achievement.
Trump’s financial ambitions for the deal were publicly stated from early on. His coinage of “fee-plus” made clear that the government’s facilitation of the transaction was worth more than standard compensation. That framing has been preserved in the binding financial terms of the final agreement, which commit the investor consortium to the $10 billion total.
JD Vance estimated TikTok’s US operations at approximately $14 billion. At $10 billion, the government’s fee represents roughly 70% of that valuation — compared to the approximately 1% advisory fee that investment banks charge on comparable transactions. The government has extracted more financial value from this deal than the investors who own the platform and bear the operational risk.
TikTok continues to operate normally in the US, with profit-sharing with ByteDance maintained. The deal reflects an administration that has redefined the financial upside of executive power — treating government approval not as a regulatory function but as a revenue-generating asset of extraordinary value.
How the US Government Became TikTok’s Biggest Financial Beneficiary
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Photo credit: Ivan Radic, via Flickr (CC BY 2.0)
