Will TikTok’s GoTo gambit save its Indonesian business?

The more the world’s youngsters love TikTok’s viral videos, the more their elected elders hate the app. They decry it for supposedly corroding young minds and, worse, for its links to China, home to its parent company, ByteDance. Many in America want to ban it. India already has. In October Indonesia, another big and promising market, shut down TikTok’s fledgling but lucrative sideline of selling goods via its videos, by requiring social-media firms to obtain an e-commerce licence—with no guarantee of success.

Such obstacles have forced TikTok to act strategically, for instance by moving its global headquarters to Singapore and hiring a Singaporean chief executive, which has put distance between it and its Chinese parent. In another canny move, on December 11th it announced that it was paying $840m for a 75% stake in Tokopedia, the e-commerce arm of GoTo, an Indonesian tech conglomerate. It has also pledged to invest $1.5bn in the tie-up.

Related posts

Like it or not, with Nord Stream 2, Putin has a foot on the gas Europe badly needs

admin

CAN News | The crucial mindset Jeff Bezos says you should have if you want to be successful

admin

India’s Flipkart to get $600 million from Walmart under new fundraise

admin

Can News | Starbucks Reserve Roastery set to open in Shanghai

admin

ceo spotlight – paul abbott of american express global business travel

admin

Analyst revises Amazon stock price target ahead of earnings

admin

A short government shutdown wouldn’t crash the economy, but a long one holds risks

admin

United asks pilots to take unpaid time off, citing Boeing’s delayed aircraft

admin

Sam Bankman-Fried: Disgraced ‘Crypto King’ to be sentenced

admin

How billion-dollar store makeovers are taking on the ‘retail apocalypse’

admin

can news-INCON Announces New Leadership Team

admin

All hail the net zero strategy: a year late and lacking in both ambition and funding

admin