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TikTok ban depends on majority stake

At present, ByteDance, a private Chinese company, owns Tiktok. On Wednesday, 13 March 2024, the US House of Representatives approved a bilateral bill to cancel the international app if the company does not divest its stake.

In a CNBC Squawk Box interview, Mnuchin, who is currently at the helm of Liberty Strategic Capital, said:

I think the legislation should pass and I think it should be sold. It’s a great business and I’m going to put together a group to buy TikTok.

Mnuchin said that he has contacted a “bunch of people” about putting together a band of investors with the goal of buying TikTok. The former Trump administration finance manager did not, however, provide an insight into who these investors might be.


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To justify the US ownership of the ByteDance app, Mnuchin went on to say that China would not allow the US to own and operate TikTok on Chinese soil. The bill reportedly passed by a vote of 352 to 65 and will now go on to the US Senate where it will be scrutinised. Should it go through, President Joe Biden has already indicated that he will sign it.

The post Tiktok Ban Depends on majority stake appeared first on LeapRate.



This post first appeared on Ironfx Review: An Overview, please read the originial post: here

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TikTok ban depends on majority stake

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