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US-China relations
EconomyGlobal Economy

TikTok deal: for US-China investments, is this the new normal or a reciprocity risk?

Following Trump’s executive order on TikTok, Beijing urges Washington to provide a level playing field for Chinese investors

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US President Donald Trump shows a signed executive order on a deal that would divest TikTok’s US operations from its Chinese owner, ByteDance, at the White House on Thursday. Photo: Reuters
Mandy Zuoin ShanghaiandRalph Jenningsin Hong Kong
As US President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Thursday to bring the widely watched TikTok dispute closer to a resolution, the move fuelled expectations of broader US-China trade deals when their leaders are expected to meet next month.

The proposed divestiture, meanwhile, has also raised questions about the fate of Chinese and American companies investing and operating in each other’s markets.

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In the latest development in the saga involving the short-video app, Trump wrote in the Thursday order that divestiture of the influential platform under Chinese firm ByteDance would allow American users to continue using it, while also protecting national security.

That followed a framework deal reached in Madrid earlier this month, and a “go-ahead” from President Xi Jinping in their call last week, Trump said. Under the proposed terms of the deal, TikTok would operate under US ownership, led by investors such as Oracle, with ByteDance retaining a 20 per cent stake.

At a news conference on Friday, China’s foreign ministry urged Washington to provide a level playing field for Chinese investors following the TikTok deal.

“The Chinese government respects the wishes of enterprises and welcomes them to conduct business negotiations based on market rules, reaching solutions that comply with Chinese laws and balance interests,” spokesman Guo Jiakun said when asked to comment on the deal.

“We hope the US will provide an open, fair and non-discriminatory business environment for Chinese companies investing in the US,” he said, without disclosing further details of the deal.

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Is the proposed TikTok sale to US and global investors a done deal?

Is the proposed TikTok sale to US and global investors a done deal?

Dexter Roberts, a US-based senior fellow at the Atlantic Council think tank’s Global China Hub, said that, following the TikTok deal, Trump and his team would love to see more Chinese companies localising.

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