The financial terms of TikTok’s restructuring have come into sharp focus, with the Trump administration set to receive a total of $10 billion from investors who assumed control of the platform’s American operations. The money is being treated as a government transaction fee, though it far exceeds any such fee charged by a US administration in recent memory. It represents the most direct financial claim the executive branch has made on a corporate deal in modern history.
ByteDance, the Chinese owner of TikTok, was compelled to divest its US operations following years of bipartisan pressure and a legislative framework that gave the company a stark choice: sell or be banned. The buyers — Oracle, UAE-based MGX, and Silver Lake — stepped in, completing the transaction in January with a $2.5 billion Treasury payment. The remainder of the $10 billion will follow in installments under the agreed terms.
Throughout the process, Trump was transparent about his expectation of a significant financial return for the US. His coinage of the term “fee-plus” captured his view that the administration’s enabling role entitled it to more than a conventional fee. His September executive order gave formal legal backing to both the ownership change and the payment structure.
The financial optics are striking. JD Vance has placed TikTok’s US valuation at approximately $14 billion, making the $10 billion fee equivalent to roughly 70% of the total asset value. That compares to a standard investment banking fee of around 1% for transactions of comparable scale. The administration’s take is roughly 70 times what commercial deal-makers would typically earn.
TikTok continues to operate normally in the United States, with American investors at the helm and a profit-sharing arrangement with ByteDance still in place. The deal sits alongside several other unusual financial interventions by the current administration, including government stakes in Intel and USA Rare Earth, and the launch of a Trump-branded cryptocurrency from the White House.