Amazon.com Inc. submitted a bid to the White House to purchase the social video app TikTok from its Chinese owners, according to a person familiar with the matter.
The company sent its proposal in a letter to Vice President JD Vance, who’s heading efforts to help facilitate a sale of the US operations of the video platform ahead of a deadline later this week, and commerce secretary Howard Lutnick, the people said.
But the offer, reported earlier by The New York Times, is not being considered seriously by the administration, according to the person, who discussed the sale process on the condition of anonymity. The company declined to comment.
Even if Amazon’s bid fails to gain traction inside the White House, the company’s interest could compel other suitors to pay more, which squeezes more money out of a potential rival. Being involved in negotiations could also give Amazon visibility into TikTok’s financial performance, including its TikTok Shop, a rising competitor to Amazon’s online retail business.
President Donald Trump is expected to meet with Vance and other top administration officials Wednesday afternoon to consider ideas for divesting TikTok’s US operations from its Chinese parent ByteDance Ltd. The administration is weighing other plans, including one that would include Oracle Corp. and Blackstone Inc. and potentially other investors in a joint venture, Bloomberg reported earlier.
Amazon’s proposal joins several other publicly known offers, including one from a group led by billionaire Frank McCourt and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, another featuring tech entrepreneur Jesse Tinsley and YouTube star MrBeast, and a merger offer by San Francisco-based Perplexity AI.
The field also includes a bid from AppLovin Corp., CNBC reported Wednesday. AppLovin shares jumped as much as 6 percent on the news. A company spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Trump faces an Apr. 5 deadline for ByteDance to find a buyer for TikTok’s US operations or see the app banned in the country, though he has said he would be willing to extend the deadline as necessary. A bipartisan group of US lawmakers passed the law, signed by former President Joe Biden, last year to address concerns that the Chinese government could collect sensitive data on US citizens.
Trump has extended the deadline once already from an initial date of Jan. 19. Even if he signs off on the proposal, it would still require approval from TikTok’s parent company and the Chinese government. It remains unclear whether ByteDance and the Chinese have been involved in the conversations.
McCourt said Wednesday that his plan for acquiring TikTok remains on the table, but added that he sees little chance of a deal being settled by the Trump administration before the Apr. 5 deadline.
“I personally think that’s highly unlikely but we’ll know more this afternoon or certainly by the 5th,” McCourt said in an interview on Bloomberg Television.
By Spencer Soper, Stephanie Lai and Kate Sullivan
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