ByteDance matches Tencent’s US$80 billion sales after TikTok boom

Published Mon, Apr 3, 2023 · 06:12 PM
    • ByteDance's pace of expansion underscores the resilience of its business at a time when Washington is threatening to join India in banning TikTok, which a growing a number of government agencies across the world are wiping from official phones.
    • ByteDance's pace of expansion underscores the resilience of its business at a time when Washington is threatening to join India in banning TikTok, which a growing a number of government agencies across the world are wiping from official phones. PHOTO: REUTERS

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    BYTEDANCE’S revenue surged more than 30 per cent to surpass US$80 billion in 2022, matching the tally at archrival Tencent Holdings after twin video platforms TikTok and Douyin drew eyeballs and advertisers from social media incumbents.

    The world’s most valuable private tech firm told its investors in a recent memo that revenue surged from around US$60 billion in 2021, according to a person who saw the memo but asked to remain anonymous when discussing private information. 

    That double-digit growth topped most of the global Internet leaders including Meta Platforms and Amazon.com. At the US$80 billion mark, ByteDance’s topline is now almost on a par with that of WeChat-operator Tencent, which raked in 554.6 billion yuan (S$107.3 billion) last year. Representatives with ByteDance did not respond to a request for comment on its financials, which were first reported by technology business publication The Information.

    That pace of expansion underscores the resilience of ByteDance’s business at a time when Washington is threatening to join India in banning TikTok, which a growing number of government agencies across the world are wiping from official phones. TikTok and its Chinese cousin, Douyin, are siphoning advertising dollars from other social media platforms because more cost-conscious marketers are shifting away from online media and towards faster-growing video services.

    While global recession risks have taken a toll on technology companies, ByteDance had to deal with issues beyond just higher interest rates and inflation – particularly in the US and at home in China.

    TikTok has amassed more than 150 million monthly users in America, spurring concerns about China’s access to the data that it gathers. TikTok chief executive officer Shou Chew this month sat through a hostile four-and-a-half-hour congressional hearing, during which he did little to sway some of his employer’s loudest critics.

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    Back home, ByteDance joined the likes of Alibaba Group Holding and Tencent to implement unprecedented cost curbs during a year of endless regulatory crackdowns and Covid restrictions. The Beijing company founded about a decade ago curtailed some of its riskier projects – including in gaming and venture investment. Douyin remains its biggest cash cow as the video forum evolved to become an all-in-one app with built-in purchases, online meal delivery and grocery features.

    ByteDance’s still-robust growth could boost confidence among investors shaken by recent global events. The Chinese social media behemoth was valued at around US$220 billion in a recent private-market investment by Abu Dhabi AI firm G42, down from the US$300 billion that TikTok’s owner set during a September share buyback programme. BLOOMBERG

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