TikTok’s U.S. operations could be worth as much as $50 billion if ByteDance decides to sell

TikTok’s U.S. operations could be worth as much as  billion if ByteDance decides to sell


Jakub Porzycki | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Business moguls like Elon Musk should be prepared to spend tens of billions of dollars for TikTok’s U.S. operations should parent company ByteDance decide to sell. 

TikTok is staring at a potential ban in the U.S. if the Supreme Court decides to uphold a national security law in which service providers like Apple and Google would be penalized for hosting the app after the Sunday deadline. ByteDance has not indicated that it will sell the app’s U.S. unit, but the Chinese government has considered a plan in which X owner Elon Musk would acquire the operations as part of several scenarios in consideration, Bloomberg News reported Monday.

If ByteDance decides to sell, potential buyers may have to spend between $40 billion to $50 billion. That’s the valuation that CFRA Research Senior Vice President Angelo Zino has estimated for TikTok’s U.S. operations. Zino based his valuation on estimates of TikTok’s U.S. user base and revenue in comparison to rival apps. 

TikTok has about 115 million monthly mobile users in the U.S., which is slightly behind Instagram’s 131 million, according to an estimate by market intelligence firm Sensor Tower. That puts TikTok ahead of Snapchat, Pinterest and Reddit, which have U.S. monthly mobile user bases of 96 million, 74 million and 32 million, according to Sensor Tower.

Zino’s estimate, however, is down from the more than $60 billion that he estimated for the unit in March 2024, when the House passed the initial national security bill that President Joe Biden signed into law the following month.

The lowered estimate is due to TikTok’s current geopolitical predicament and because “industry multiples have come in a bit” since March, Zino told CNBC in an email. Zino’s estimate doesn’t include TikTok’s valuable recommendation algorithms, which a U.S. acquirer would not obtain as part of a deal, with the algorithms and their alleged ties to China being central to the U.S. government’s case that TikTok poses a national security threat.

Analysts at Bloomberg Intelligence have their estimate for TikTok’s U.S. operations pegged in the range of $30 billion to $35 billion. That’s the estimate they published in July, saying at the time that the value of the unit would be “discounted due to it being a forced sale.”  

Bloomberg Intelligence analysts noted that finding a buyer for TikTok’s U.S. operations that can both afford the transaction and deal with the accompanying regulatory scrutiny on data privacy makes a sale challenging. It could also make it difficult for a buyer to expand TikTok’s ads business, they wrote. 

A consortium of businesspeople including billionaire Frank McCourt and O’Leary Ventures chairman Kevin O’Leary put in a bid to buy TikTok from ByteDance. O’Leary has previously said they would be willing to pay up to $20 billion to acquire the U.S. assets without the algorithm.

Unlike Musk, O’Leary said his group’s bid would be free from regulatory scrutiny in a Monday interview with Fox News.

O’Leary said that he’s “a huge Elon Musk fan,” but added “the idea that the regulator, even under Trump’s administration, would allow this is pretty slim.”

TikTok, X and O’Leary Ventures did not respond to requests for comment.

Watch: Chinese TikTok alternative surges

Chinese TikTok alternative surges



Source

Can AI outperform doctors? Experts weigh the pros and cons
Technology

Can AI outperform doctors? Experts weigh the pros and cons

Cravetiger | Moment | Getty Images You may already be familiar with AI taking notes in your doctor’s office, or being used to help book appointments or analyze medical images. But some experts believe consumers should be using AI even more to help understand their health. “People should be using AI much more than they […]

Read More
Jim Cramer is unfazed by Tuesday’s sell-off: ‘You should expect them, even hope for them’
Technology

Jim Cramer is unfazed by Tuesday’s sell-off: ‘You should expect them, even hope for them’

CNBC’s Jim Cramer said he’s unfazed by Tuesday’s sell-off in AI stocks because it’s exactly what the market needs. “Rain is to gardening as sell-offs are to the stock market,” the “Mad Money” host said. “You should expect them, maybe even hope for them. We just don’t realize it at the time.” Stocks retreated on […]

Read More
OpenAI brings its models to Amazon’s cloud after ending exclusivity with Microsoft
Technology

OpenAI brings its models to Amazon’s cloud after ending exclusivity with Microsoft

Amazon Web Services CEO Matt Garman speaks at the HumanX conference in San Francisco on April 7, 2026. Big Event Media | HumanX Conference | Getty Images A day after OpenAI revamped its relationship with Microsoft so that it can run all of its products on any cloud, the artificial intelligence company said its models […]

Read More