logo
TikTok secures new UK office, to add 500 jobs, as US fate remains uncertain

TikTok secures new UK office, to add 500 jobs, as US fate remains uncertain

TikTok , the short video app owned by Beijing-based ByteDance , is expanding in the United Kingdom, adding a new office and more than 500 jobs, while its fate in the US remains uncertain as a June 19 sell-or-ban deadline approaches.
The new 135,000 sq ft office in Barbican, London, is set to open early next year, according to a statement published on TikTok's website on Monday. The additional jobs will grow its UK workforce to 3,000 this year, the company said.
In addition to its existing 88,500 sq ft Farringdon head office, TikTok's total UK property investments would amount to around £140 million (US$190 million). The company also claimed its service had contributed £1.6 billion to the UK economy, with some 1.5 million businesses operating on TikTok, supporting 32,000 jobs.
TikTok said it 'carefully evaluates where it chooses to invest and expand its operations' and has a 'deep commitment to the UK'. The move comes as its average monthly active users in the country surpassed 30 million in the first quarter, making it TikTok's largest market in Europe.
TikTok has been expanding overseas amid turmoil in its largest market, the US, where it has 170 million users. The administration of US President Donald Trump has since January delayed enforcing a law that requires ByteDance to divest the app or face a ban from US app stores and cloud providers. After previously extending the enforcement deadline in April,
Trump said last month during an NBC interview that he would be willing to extend it again this month.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

What the Trump-Musk feud reveals about American decline
What the Trump-Musk feud reveals about American decline

South China Morning Post

time34 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

What the Trump-Musk feud reveals about American decline

Feel strongly about these letters, or any other aspects of the news? Share your views by emailing us your Letter to the Editor at letters@ or filling in this Google form . Submissions should not exceed 400 words, and must include your full name and address, plus a phone number for verification I refer to 'Trump and Musk feud in real time as bromance implodes in spectacular fashion' ( June 6 ). The public dispute between Donald Trump and Elon Musk illustrates the late stage of a declining republic, an America that is increasingly dominated by billionaires rather than elected officials. The two ostensibly fell out over US President Trump's 'big beautiful bill' , a tax plan that billionaire Musk said would increase the US federal deficit. But Trump said Musk was just outraged that the bill is scrapping tax credits for electric vehicles, a move projected to cost Tesla , a company heavily reliant on various government programmes, US$1.2 billion. It is telling that the world's richest man, who is so indebted to US taxpayers, can decry a system he has gamed masterfully the moment he is inconvenienced.

Trump tariffs can remain in effect, US appeals court rules
Trump tariffs can remain in effect, US appeals court rules

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Trump tariffs can remain in effect, US appeals court rules

US President Donald Trump can continue to enforce his global tariffs for now, a federal appeals court held in a win for the president on one of his signature economic policies. Advertisement The order Tuesday by the US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit extends an earlier, short-term reprieve for the administration as it presses a challenge to a lower court ruling last month that blocked the tariffs. The Justice Department had argued that US officials' concerns about ongoing trade negotiations outweighed the economic harm claimed by the small businesses that sued. The Washington-based court put the case on an expedited track, citing the 'issues of exceptional importance' at stake, and scheduled arguments for July 31. The court did not offer a detailed reason for siding with the administration at this stage, indicating in the order that the government had met its burden for showing that keeping the lower court's injunction on hold was 'warranted'. No judge noted a dissent. The Trump administration asked the appeals court to step in after the US Court of International Trade last month ruled that Trump had misused an emergency law to implement the tariffs. Absent swift intervention by the US Supreme Court, the levies will likely stay in place for months, if not longer, as the rest of the legal fight plays out before the Washington-based appellate court. Tuesday's order comes a month before Trump's own 90-day pause on most of his sweeping 'reciprocal' tariffs is set to expire. On July 9, US tariff rates are set to increase drastically for many nations, absent a trade or further extension. Goods from the European Union, for instance, are facing a 50 per cent levy. Advertisement Companies led by New York wine importer V.O.S. Selections Inc. claimed that letting the tariffs go into effect would lead to much higher costs and lower sales, with some of them likely to end up in bankruptcy. The administration argued that blocking the tariffs would disrupt US diplomacy and intrude upon the president's power to conduct foreign affairs.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store