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Last-minute deal on TikTok: Trump to speak to Xi after US-China talks go ‘very well’

“A deal was also reached on a ‘certain’ company that young people in our country very much wanted to save,” US President posts on Truth Social, sans specifics

Updated on: Sep 16, 2025 04:08 AM IST
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US President Donald Trump on Monday hinted that a deal has been reached with China for TikTok to continue operating in the American market, just ahead of the September 17 deadline his administration had set for the Chinese app to comply with US ownership terms.

US President Donald Trump said he will speak with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on Friday. (AFP)
US President Donald Trump said he will speak with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on Friday. (AFP)

Trump did not mention names or details but posted on Truth Social: “A deal was also reached on a ‘certain’ company that young people in our country very much wanted to save.”

He also said he will be speaking with Chinese President Xi Jinping on Friday.

US treasury secretary Scott Bessent, speaking after talks in Spain with Chinese officials for a trade deal, later said indeed a framework for TikTok ownership change to American hands is ready, but it would be finalised by Trump and Xi on Friday.

"The big Trade Meeting in Europe between The United States of America, and China, has gone VERY WELL! It will be concluding shortly," Trump wrote earlier.

Specifically, the US wants divestment from TikTok by ByteDance to move to majority US ownership.

Speaking to reporters earlier, US treasury secretary Scott Bessent and trade representative Jamieson Greer said China wanted concessions on trade and technology in exchange for agreeing to divest from the popular social media app. Bessent had said extending the TikTok divestment deadline would depend on how talks went.

Why banning TikTok has been difficult for US

China has been reluctant to divest from TikTok because it would open the door for more forced sales of Chinese companies in the West, said Alicia Garcia-Herrero, a Taiwan-based senior fellow at think tank Bruegel.

For the US, too, banning TikTok could be difficult because of the young voters that use it, Garcia-Herrero said. Trump also spoke of the company that “young people in our country very much wanted to save”, adding weight to this argument.

Senior US and Chinese officials meet to discuss trade issues and TikTok, in Madrid, Spain.

The negotiations in Madrid, which began on Sunday, are the fourth round of talks in four months to address strained trade ties.

They take place as Washington demands that its allies place tariffs on imports from China over Chinese purchases of Russian oil, which Beijing on Monday said was an attempt at coercion. India has also faced US tariffs over the same reason — something that has led to an India-China thaw in relations.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Lin Jian had said China had no new information to give.

And, in what is widely seen as a retaliatory shot, China's market regulator said on Monday that a preliminary investigation of Nvidia had found the US chip giant had violated its anti-monopoly law.

(with inputs from Reuters)

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Aarish Chhabra

Aarish Chhabra is an Associate Editor with the Hindustan Times online team, writing news reports and explanatory articles, besides overseeing coverage for the website. His career spans nearly two decades across India's most respected newsrooms in print, digital, and broadcast. He has reported, written, and edited across formats — from breaking news and live election coverage, to analytical long-reads and cultural commentary — building a body of work that reflects both editorial rigour and a deep curiosity about the society he writes for. Aarish studied English literature, sociology and history, besides journalism, at Panjab University, Chandigarh, and started his career in that city, eventually moving to Delhi. He is also the author of ‘The Big Small Town: How Life Looks from Chandigarh’, a collection of critical essays originally serialised as a weekly column in the Hindustan Times, examining the culture and politics of a city that is far more than its famous architecture — and, in doing so, holding up a mirror to modern India. In stints at the BBC, The Indian Express, NDTV, and Jagran New Media, he worked across formats and languages; mainly English, also Hindi and Punjabi. He was part of the crack team for the BBC Explainer project replicated across the world by the broadcaster. At Jagran, he developed editorial guides and trained journalists on integrity and content quality. He has also worked at the intersection of journalism and education. At the Indian School of Business (ISB), Hyderabad, he developed a website that simplified academic research in management. At Bennett University's Times School of Media in Noida, he taught students the craft of digital journalism: from newsgathering and writing, to social media strategy and video storytelling. Having moved from a small town to a bigger town to a mega city for education and work, his intellectual passions lie at the intersection of society, politics, and popular culture — a perspective that informs both his writing and his view of the world. When not working, he is constantly reading long-form journalism or watching brainrot content, sometimes both at the same time.

Get the latest headlines from US news and global updates from Pakistan, Nepal, UK, Bangladesh, Russia and US Iran war Live, get all the latest headlines in one place on Hindustan Times.
Get the latest headlines from US news and global updates from Pakistan, Nepal, UK, Bangladesh, Russia and US Iran war Live, get all the latest headlines in one place on Hindustan Times.
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