Stock in world's most valuable start-up has changed hands recently
at a price that suggests its value has risen more than 33 per cent from about
$75 billion during a major round of funding 2 years ago.
ByteDance
valuation has risen at least a third to more than $100 billion in recent
private share transactions, people familiar with the matter said, reflecting
expectations the owner of video phenomenon TikTok will keep pulling in
advertisers.
Stock in the
world’s most valuable start-up has changed hands recently at a price that
suggests its value has risen more than 33 per cent from about $75 billion
during a major round of funding two years ago, the people said, asking not to
be identified because the matter isn’t public. Some trades recently valued the
Chinese company between $105 billion and $110 billion on the secondary markets,
some of people said. It has also traded as high as $140 billion, one person
said.
The trades are
private transactions and may not fully reflect broader investor expectations.
Stock in the secondary market is usually valued at a discount to primary shares
since it’s less liquid and there are fewer financial details on company
performance available to investors.
“The trading of
ByteDance is reflective of the global wave of consumers who agree that
ByteDance can displace Facebook as the leading social network,” said Andrea
Walne, a partner at Manhattan Venture Partners who follows the secondary
markets.
In the past
decade, Bytedance is surpassed only by Alibaba Group Holding and Ant Financial
Services Group as companies that have traded at a higher premium in the
secondary market, she added.
ByteDance has
grown into a potent online force propelled in part by a TikTok
short video platform that’s taken US teenagers by storm.
Investors are keen
to grab a slice of a company that draws some 1.5 billion monthly active users
to a family of apps that includes Douyin, TikTok’s Chinese twin, as well as
news service Toutiao. That’s despite American lawmakers raising privacy and
censorship concerns about its operation.
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