The involvement of UAE-based investment firm MGX in TikTok’s US ownership transition adds an international dimension to an already extraordinary financial arrangement. MGX joins Oracle and Silver Lake as members of the consortium that acquired TikTok’s American operations from ByteDance — and together they are committed to paying the Trump administration $10 billion as a transaction fee. An initial $2.5 billion was paid to the US Treasury when the deal closed in January, with the remainder to follow in scheduled installments.
The divestiture of TikTok’s US operations from ByteDance was driven by bipartisan national security concerns in Congress about the risks of Chinese ownership of a widely-used American platform. Trump’s administration finalized the terms, with a September executive order formalizing the new ownership. The president celebrated the result as a model of American-controlled technology management.
Trump used the phrase “fee-plus” consistently to describe the government’s expected return — a term he invented to communicate that the administration’s enabling role in the deal was worth substantial and above-market compensation. The $10 billion binding the consortium in the final agreement is the concrete financial result of that communication.
JD Vance estimated TikTok’s US operations at approximately $14 billion. The government’s $10 billion fee equals roughly 70% of that total — compared to investment banking advisory fees of about 1% on comparable transactions. The international character of the investor consortium, with UAE capital playing a significant role, adds another layer of complexity to an already complex arrangement.
TikTok continues to operate in the United States under the new management, with profit-sharing with ByteDance intact. MGX’s participation in the deal brings Gulf state investment into the heart of one of America’s most politically sensitive technology transactions — a detail that adds to the deal’s multifaceted significance.