Washington has been involved in many major corporate transactions over the decades, but none have generated a direct financial return for the government anywhere close to the $10 billion attached to TikTok’s ownership restructuring. Oracle, UAE’s MGX, and Silver Lake completed the acquisition of TikTok’s US operations from ByteDance in January, depositing an initial $2.5 billion into the US Treasury. Scheduled installments will continue until the full $10 billion is paid, making this the most financially lucrative corporate intervention in modern US government history.
ByteDance was forced to divest through a combination of bipartisan congressional legislation and executive pressure rooted in national security concerns. The Trump administration shaped the final terms of the transition, with a September executive order providing the formal legal framework for the new ownership. Trump was publicly enthusiastic about the outcome, describing TikTok’s new structure as unambiguously American-owned and operated.
The president had been clear about his financial expectations from early in the process. His term “fee-plus” conveyed both the fact of a payment and his view that it should exceed any conventional fee benchmark. The $10 billion that now defines the deal’s financial architecture is the most direct possible expression of that expectation.
JD Vance’s estimate of TikTok’s US valuation at approximately $14 billion means the government’s $10 billion fee equals roughly 70% of total deal value. Investment banking advisory fees on comparable transactions are approximately 1% of deal value, making the government’s proportional claim about 70 times the commercial standard. Washington’s most lucrative corporate intervention has turned a national security measure into a multi-billion dollar revenue event.
TikTok operates normally for American users under the new ownership structure, with profit-sharing with ByteDance maintained. The deal has established a benchmark for the financial returns that can flow to the executive branch when it positions itself as an essential facilitator of major corporate restructurings.
