Walmart joins Microsoft bid for TikTok as CEO Kevin Mayer quits

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Reuters

Walmart Inc said it was joining Microsoft in a bid for the U.S. assets of the Chinese video-sharing app TikTok's, revealing its plans hours after the company's chief executive said he would step down.

The news that CEO Kevin Mayer, a high-profile former Disney executive, was leaving three months after joining TikTok, broke first on August 27, while the company is in the middle of negotiations to sell U.S. operations to Microsoft Corp or Oracle Corp. Mayer was Walt Disney Co's top streaming executive before becoming chief executive officer of TikTok and chief operating officer of parent ByteDance on June 1.

Later on, Walmart announced its plans. The retailer lauded TikTok's integration of e-commerce and advertising capabilities in other markets and said that a three-way partnership could bring that integration to the United States. The deal would help Walmart reach customers across virtual and physical sales channels and grow its online marketplace and its advertising business. Walmart shares rose six percent.

"We are confident that a Walmart and Microsoft partnership would meet both the expectations of U.S. TikTok users while satisfying the concerns of U.S. government regulators," Walmart said in a statement.

TikTok filed a lawsuit on August 24 against the executive order. "We do not take suing the government lightly," TikTok said in a blog post. "However, we feel we have no choice but to take action to protect our rights."

(With inputs from Reuters)