- Sources told the Financial Times
TikTok 's proposed partnership withOracle won't include a cut for theUS Treasury . - President Trump said last month a "large percentage" of any TikTok
deal would have to go to the US Treasury — although he wasn't clear which party in the deal he thought should pay that sum. - TikTok appears not to be selling its US operations outright to Oracle, but has instead proposed a partnership with Oracle as its "trusted technology partner."
TikTok's proposed partnership with US tech giant Oracle won't include a cut for the US Treasury contrary to comments by President Trump last month, sources told the Financial Times.
Two sources familiar with TikTok and Oracle's proposed deal, which was officially announced on Monday and has been submitted to the governmental Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (CFIUS) for approval, told the FT it doesn't include any cut going to the US Treasury.
An anonymous senior US official said a Treasury cut wasn't even a topic for discussion, but the deal would have economic benefits. Sources familiar with the discussions told Reuters that TikTok has proposed creating 25,000 US jobs as part of the deal. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CNBC on Monday the deal involved a commitment to create 20,000 new jobs in the US.
Days before Trump signed the first of two executive orders on August 6 effectively forcing TikTok to divest its US operations to an American company, the president said the Treasury would get a "large percentage" of any sale price. Speaking to reporters on August 3, the president was not clear where he thought that money should come from.
"Whether it's
TikTok appears not to be selling its US operations to Oracle outright, instead the companies have drawn up a partnership with Oracle as TikTok's "trusted technology partner."
In a statement sent to Business Insider a TikTok spokesman said it believes the proposal should "resolve the Administration's security concerns" about the app.
The Trump administration maintains because TikTok's parent company