ByteDance’s higher valuation reflects resilience amid upcoming US divestment of TikTok


TikTok owner ByteDance has initiated a new round of employee share buy-backs that give the company a higher valuation, even as it works on a deal to divest the video app’s US operations amid geopolitical uncertainty.

The latest repurchase programme, initially open to employees based in the United States last month and the rest of the world last week, priced the vested restricted stock units (RSUs) at US$200.41 per share, up 5.5 per cent from US$189.90 during the round held in April, according to two employees. China-based staff received the repurchase email on October 10.

For former employees, the price was US$180.37 per share, almost 12 per cent higher than the last round’s US$161.42. This offer narrowed the gap between the two groups, as previous buy-back programmes typically offered former employees 20 per cent less than the price available to current staff.

The company did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Monday.

ByteDance is currently working on arrangements for its TikTok operations in the US. Photo: Shutterstock Images
ByteDance is currently working on arrangements for its TikTok operations in the US. Photo: Shutterstock Images

The new repurchase price suggests that ByteDance’s management does not see the TikTok deal as a big blow to the company’s valuation, which was estimated to be about US$330 billion based on the purchase price, supporting speculation that the company would continue to gain financially from US TikTok operations as a joint venture.

“The share repurchase price [for employees] may serve as a significant reference point for company valuation,” said Guo Tao, a Beijing-based angel investor and expert in artificial intelligence. “However, the actual valuation requires a multidimensional assessment taking into account market conditions, profitability, growth prospects, among others.”

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