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Sen. Warner Presses Treasury on Secret $10 Billion TikTok Sale Fee

Axios reports that Sen. Mark Warner (D‑Va.) has sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent demanding details about a roughly $10 billion fee that TikTok’s U.S. buyers reportedly agreed to pay the U.S. Treasury on top of the $14 billion purchase price to ByteDance, effectively making the deal a $24 billion transaction. Warner is asking how the fee was calculated, who approved it, and how the money will be used without violating the Anti‑Deficiency Act, which bars executive agencies from spending unappropriated funds except for deficit reduction. The report notes that such a fee is unprecedented in scale — far larger than a typical M&A advisory fee — and that Treasury, TikTok U.S., Oracle, Silver Lake and Vice President JD Vance’s office, which led negotiations, all declined to explain it. Axios says background sources who had previously discussed the TikTok divestiture process are now refusing to talk about the fee, with one suggesting aggressive FOIA requests may be needed to uncover the details. The situation raises larger questions about whether the U.S. government effectively imposed a hidden tax or extraction as the price of national‑security sign‑off on a private tech deal, and whether other bidders were competing on a tilted playing field they didn’t fully understand.

TikTok Forced Sale and U.S. Tech Policy Government Oversight of Corporate Transactions

📌 Key Facts

  • Sen. Mark Warner sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent questioning a reported $10 billion fee paid to the U.S. Treasury in connection with the sale of TikTok’s U.S. business.
  • The nominal sale price was $14 billion, but with the Treasury fee the effective transaction value rises to about $24 billion, with Oracle and Silver Lake each holding 15% and ByteDance investors keeping nearly 20%.
  • Warner specifically asks how the fee was determined, how it was approved, and how it will be spent without breaching the Anti‑Deficiency Act, while all key parties have so far declined public comment.

📊 Relevant Data

The divestiture of TikTok's US operations was mandated by the Protecting Americans from Foreign Adversary Controlled Applications Act, signed into law in April 2024, which requires ByteDance to sell the app or face a ban in the US due to national security risks associated with its Chinese ownership.

TikTok closes deal to split US app from global business — BBC

Typical merger filing fees paid to the US government for antitrust review of large transactions range from $30,000 to $2.25 million depending on deal size, far below the $10 billion fee in the TikTok deal.

Merger filing fee hikes go into effect — CFO Dive

In the US, 48% of Black adults and 45% of Hispanic adults use TikTok, compared to 35% of White adults, indicating higher usage rates among Black and Hispanic groups relative to their population shares (Black: 13.6%, Hispanic: 19.1%, White: 58.9% of US population).

8 facts about Americans and TikTok — Pew Research Center

📰 Source Timeline (1)

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March 18, 2026
4:09 PM
New questions arise over TikTok sale
Axios by Dan Primack