ByteDance, China’s most valuable unicorn and the owner of TikTok, has started a new round of share buy-backs for its global employees that price the equity higher than the previous round, according to two people familiar with the matter.
A ByteDance representative confirmed the numbers without elaborating.
The more generous buy-back plan suggests that the company’s valuation is growing in the private market along with its revenues and the popularity of its apps.
As a privately held company, ByteDance does not disclose financial data. But according to reports by The Wall Street Journal and tech news site The Information, ByteDance’s revenue in the third quarter last year soared roughly 43 per cent year on year to US$30.9 billion. Total sales in the first nine months of the year rose 40 per cent to US$84.4 billion.
The results make ByteDance one of China’s largest and fastest-growing tech giants.
The move has thrown fresh uncertainty over the fate of TikTok in the US and the business prospects of ByteDance.
Since late 2022, US President Joe Biden has banned TikTok on devices owned by the federal government, while more than 30 US states have also prohibited the app on state-issued government devices. Similar bans exist in the European Union and Australia.
China to block new US moves forcing ByteDance to divest TikTok, analysts say
China to block new US moves forcing ByteDance to divest TikTok, analysts say
In May last year, Montana became the first US state to pass an outright TikTok ban on all personal devices, but the law was blocked by a federal judge before it was set to go into effect in January.
ByteDance has conducted share buy-backs for current and former employees since 2017, usually twice a year. As plans for an initial public offering remain in limbo, the company has also occasionally offered to repurchase shares from institutional investors.