Home » The $10 Billion TikTok Fee and What It Says About Power, Money and Modern America

The $10 Billion TikTok Fee and What It Says About Power, Money and Modern America

by admin477351

 

The $10 billion fee attached to TikTok’s ownership transition says something important about power, money, and modern America. Oracle, UAE’s MGX, and Silver Lake — the investors who acquired TikTok’s US operations from ByteDance — are committed to paying this sum to the Trump administration, with $2.5 billion already in the Treasury since January and further installments to follow. What this arrangement says about the relationship between government authority and private commercial activity is a question that is generating serious and sustained debate.

The deal’s national security foundation was bipartisan and well-grounded. Congressional concern about ByteDance’s Chinese ownership of TikTok had built over years and ultimately produced the legislative framework that forced a divestiture. Trump’s administration finalized the terms through a September executive order, with the president vocal about his pride in both the security and financial outcomes.

Trump coined the phrase “fee-plus” to describe the government’s expected return — a term that captured his view that executive facilitation of major corporate transactions was a financially compensable contribution of exceptional value. The $10 billion binding the investor group is the most direct and largest expression of that view yet seen from this administration.

JD Vance estimated TikTok’s US operations at approximately $14 billion. The government’s $10 billion fee equals roughly 70% of that total — compared to investment banking advisory fees of around 1% on comparable transactions. What this says about modern America is that executive power, in the hands of a willing administration, can be worth roughly 70 times the market rate for the most sophisticated private sector advisors.

TikTok continues to operate normally for American users, with ByteDance profit-sharing maintained. The deal and its $10 billion fee do not just describe a transaction — they describe a moment in American history when the boundaries between political power and financial gain became harder to define than ever before.

 

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