24/7 Wall St. Key Points:
Key Points
-
Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) is a frontrunner to acquire TikTok’s U.S. operations, offering strategic benefits through user data, advertising reach, and potential e-commerce integration.
-
Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) is also in consideration, likely seeking AI or cloud synergies, though its strategic fit appears less compelling than Amazon’s.
-
A TikTok acquisition would enhance Amazon’s competitive position against Chinese e-commerce rivals and open a high-growth media and ad platform segment.
- Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset’s free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don’t waste another minute; get started by clicking here.(Sponsor)
Watch the Video
Transcript:
[00:00:04] Doug McIntyre: So the president has pushed back once again, the timeframe for when TikTok is sold.
[00:00:11] Doug McIntyre: The Chinese don’t wanna sell it. Nope. Because one of the parts of the deal is usually you’d have to have access to the Chinese algorithm feeds people more and more of what they want. the president obviously wants to see it sold. He doesn’t want to be on his watch that the thing goes away. two companies keep coming up.
[00:00:35] Doug McIntyre: Public companies in the United States keep coming up as potential. Buyers of all, or part of, I’ll just call it TikTok, USA right one, Amazon, which I get, I, get the Amazon angle. I totally get that. The Oracle Larry Ellison’s angle. I don’t quite get that unless he thinks that there’s a big cloud computing or AI, piece of that deal that helps his top line in some way.
[00:01:05] Doug McIntyre: So the Larry Ellison Oracle thing, I don’t get the Amazon thing. If they can get it at any reasonable prices, brilliant. I mean, they then get access to about 150 million. TikTok accounts in the United States. And if you’re an online retail, who doesn’t want that?
[00:01:24] Lee Jackson: Oh, absolutely. Think about even if you’re a small guy, which is even more of a reason, if Amazon is the owner, and, of course they’ll say, Hey, all TikTok retailer advertises.
[00:01:39] Lee Jackson: Hey TikTok, that, that was Amazon calling me right there saying we want it, bad. but when you think of the retailers that, permeate online business, think of the added revenue Amazon could generate from that, from their retail product line and from the money they make, dispersing that retail.
[00:02:05] Lee Jackson: ’cause a lot of it goes through, other channels, for smaller retailers. But hey, if you’re big enough, getting your stuff on AWS and all through that system could be another huge plus for them.
[00:02:22] Doug McIntyre: Well, they’d also be buying a Chinese company that would help them compete with these online Chinese retailers.
[00:02:30] Lee Jackson: Right.
[00:02:30] Doug McIntyre: Undercut Amazon
[00:02:32] Lee Jackson: of the nation. Or the world.
[00:02:34] Doug McIntyre: What you’d be doing is you’d being buy, buying Chinese to fight the Chinese and that’s not a bad side reason for doing this deal.
[00:02:44] Lee Jackson: No, it’s not. And it’ll be interesting if they do cut it out, like you said, Doug. I mean, does it have to be TikTok, USA?
[00:02:52] Lee Jackson: And it’s only here, or is it everywhere, or is it TikTok? China’s different from TikTok, USA, and there’s a lot of social media that’s banned in China, so I don’t even know how it actually plays there. But yeah, I mean, they don’t wanna let it sold, but they don’t want to have to go to the TikTok.
[00:03:13] Lee Jackson: People who I’m sure the Chinese government get a ton of money from, and they need it. I’m sure they don’t wanna see it. Totally go to zero.
[00:03:23] Doug McIntyre: Well, the other part of this is you rarely see a business deal that’s being run by the president of the United States. No, you don’t. Well, it’s another example of where tariffs have an effect on individual US businesses.
[00:03:38] Doug McIntyre: President has to be looking at the fact that if he strategically maneuvers this Right, it could be very helpful to him. Oh, absolutely. I think he’s looking at this saying, I’ve got a tariff problem with China. I’ve got people in the United States who wanna buy TikTok. So the whole thing with Chinese tariffs is very muddy, and this makes muddy muddier.
[00:04:06] Lee Jackson: Yep. And again, there’s a point where. They’ll work out a deal. she and the president will work out a deal and it, probably doesn’t take all that long because the DCRA draconian sort of numbers we’re throwing at each other, 145 for us to them and them a hundred and a quarter to us or whatever, and that’s not gonna be there forever.
[00:04:29] Lee Jackson: I mean, they’ll come to some arrangement, but, I think that the TikTok thing will get resolved and I, if I had to bet, if I was, betting on who would win, I think I would lean towards Amazon.
[00:04:43] Doug McIntyre: Yeah. And if I wanna make a, speculative, buy of some Amazon stock. This is the primary reason I would do it.
[00:04:53] Lee Jackson: Yeah. Yeah. I agree. The AWS domination of that cloud world is not what it was no. Five years ago. Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) and Azure made huge inroads. There’s other people making inroads, but offering them a new line of business. For Amazon and just for our viewers our regular readers.
[00:05:15] Lee Jackson: While he doesn’t have a big position, Warren Buffet owns Amazon. He does. Good. Good man.
The post Amazon (Nasdaq: AMZN) and TikTok Is Brilliant, Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) Not So Much appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Click this link for the original source of this article.
Author: Douglas A. McIntyre
This content is courtesy of, and owned and copyrighted by, https://247wallst.com and its author. This content is made available by use of the public RSS feed offered by the host site and is used for educational purposes only. If you are the author or represent the host site and would like this content removed now and in the future, please contact USSANews.com using the email address in the Contact page found in the website menu.