Investors have marked up ByteDance in recent months despite a US edict forcing a sale or blockade of TikTok
BYTEDANCE plans to buy back employee stock at a valuation of about US$312 billion, a significant markup from previous levels that reflects a brightening outlook for Chinese tech shares.
TikTok’s owner is offering US staff about US$189.90 a share, according to a source familiar with the deal. That’s up from about US$181 in a similar proposal from about six months ago, the source said, asking not to be identified as discussing an internal decision.
Investors have marked up ByteDance in recent months despite a US edict forcing a sale or blockade of TikTok. They have piled into Chinese tech stocks in 2025, after DeepSeek’s explosive global debut forced a re-assessment of the country’s tech sector.
Chinese President Xi Jinping’s public endorsement of tech firms last month also dangled the prospect of government support for an industry deemed crucial to reversing economic malaise and driving independence from American technology.
At least three of ByteDance’s major investors – SoftBank Group, Fidelity Investments and T Rowe Price Group – raised their internal assessments to more than US$400 billion. Representatives for ByteDance did not respond to an e-mail seeking comment on the latest transaction, which Reuters first reported.
During ByteDance’s annual share buyback last year, the offer price was set at roughly US$180 per share, which represents US$300 billion in value, Bloomberg News has reported. That’s an increase from the US$268 billion valuation applied for buybacks in 2023.
While many investors remain focused on the geopolitical risks facing TikTok’s US business, others factored in ByteDance’s strength in artificial intelligence. Its chatbot Doubao has 75 million regular active users, while the company has touted an earlier vision-understanding model as 85 per cent cheaper than the industry average price, not unlike DeepSeek. BLOOMBERG
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