From the viral hum of TikTok to the fluctuating numbers on Wall Street, 2025 has seen the lines between social media and technology stocks become more intertwined than ever. TikTok, owned by the private Chinese giant ByteDance, continues to wield enormous influence in the tech world despite the fact that its shares remain unavailable on public markets. ByteDance itself has not yet gone public, and efforts to purchase TikTok stock directly are thwarted by its private status, leaving interested investors searching for indirect ways to capitalize on the app’s unprecedented reach and engagement[2].
Recent months have seen TikTok again at the center of a geopolitical maelstrom. Following federal legislation in the United States signed in April 2024, ByteDance has been under legal pressure to divest TikTok’s American operations or face a complete ban. The result has been a series of legal battles and executive orders, with the most recent extension pushing the divestiture deadline to September 17, 2025. Market watchers expect a sale of TikTok’s U.S. business to a non-Chinese entity this year, valued potentially north of $50 billion, but uncertainty remains high as President Trump has already provided multiple extensions and may do so again[3].
The biggest players in tech are jockeying for position. Oracle, which previously struck a partnership with TikTok to host its U.S. data, stands to gain considerable market clout and growth in its cloud business if it successfully acquires TikTok’s American assets. Such a move would not only boost Oracle’s credibility but also could shake up the competitive balance, impacting rivals like Meta and Alphabet, as ad dollars and user attention follow TikTok’s energetic momentum[5].
Yet, regulatory hurdles and Chinese export controls mean any deal is unlikely to include TikTok’s beloved algorithm, presenting unique integration and innovation challenges for a new owner[3]. At the same time, ByteDance’s revenues soared to around $120 billion in 2023, reflecting social apps’ outsized effect on consumer behavior—and, by proxy, on the outlook for tech stocks tied to the digital attention economy[2][1].
For listeners tracking the intersection of social media trends and tech stock volatility, TikTok remains the pulse to watch as 2025 unfolds.
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI