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Analysis-In TikTok sale, the White House is playing an unprecedented role

By Dawn Chmielewski, Kane Wu and Krystal Hu

(Reuters) - In the closely watched sale of TikTok, the White House is playing the role of investment bank, with Vice President JD Vance running the auction. It is an unprecedented level of involvement in a private deal by the country's highest office that adds to the complexity of striking an agreement.

Vance’s lead counsel, former Federal Election Commission Chair Sean Cooksey, is the main contact for bidders for TikTok's U.S. assets, providing feedback and suggesting adjustments to their offers, according to bidder Reid Rasner, a Wyoming entrepreneur.

U.S. President Donald Trump said four different groups are bidding on the popular short-video app, which has 170 million American users and is facing shutdown in the U.S. next month if Chinese owner ByteDance does not find an American buyer.

“A lot of people want it, and it’s up to me,” he said on March 9.

While it is not unusual for Washington to meddle in the private dealings of publicly traded companies for strategic reasons, the White House’s direct oversight of the bidding process is extraordinary, said government ethics lawyer Richard Briffault, who teaches at Columbia Law School.

“I'm actually not aware of anything like this,” Briffault said. “This is at the highest levels of the government, and it's not clear this is a strategically significant company.”

The White House did not respond to requests for comment from Vance or his team. TikTok did not answer a request for comment.

Jeff Yass' Susquehanna International Group, General Atlantic, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Sequoia Capital are among ByteDance's U.S. backers.

The sale has attracted interest from other billionaires and entrepreneurs. Project Liberty founder Frank McCourt is teaming up with Canadian investor Kevin O'Leary and Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian on a bid. Social media star Jimmy Donaldson is in talks to join that group, a source familiar with his plans said.

Trump has suggested the U.S. could take a 50% stake in TikTok's U.S. business.

The bidding process is anything but typical, McCourt said. There is no defined set of assets, no valuation and ByteDance has not hired an investment bank to lead the deal, he told Reuters.

Beijing has a say in TikTok's sale and ByteDance could shut the app down in the U.S., McCourt said. The Chinese parent company is lightly engaging in talks, but not to the degree one would expect from a motivated seller, he said.

The negotiations are fluid, said several potential buyers, who have until April 5 to reach a deal. Vance expects general terms of an agreement by the deadline, officials said.