ByteDance supplanted Baidu in China’s top three Big Tech companies – known by the acronym BAT – some time ago and there are signs that it may be pulling further ahead after a report that revenue soared in the second quarter on advertising sales, giving it faster growth than rivals Tencent Holdings and Alibaba Group Holding.
Beijing-based ByteDance, which operates TikTok and its Chinese sibling Douyin, raked in US$29 billion of revenue in the second quarter of 2023, a surge of 40 per cent from the same period last year, according to a report last week by The Information that cited anonymous sources.
ByteDance did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The growth also outpaced Facebook parent Meta Platforms, which similarly draws a majority of its revenue from advertising. ByteDance’s first-half sales hit US$54 billion, closing in on Meta’s US$60.6 billion in the same period, The Information reported.
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ByteDance is privately-held so not obliged to publicly reveal its financial information – but if the report is correct, this would mean that its revenue growth outpaced Tencent and Alibaba in the same period, which chalked up 11 per cent and 14 per cent growth respectively. ByteDance even surpassed internet giant Tencent in terms of total sales, but not e-commerce heavyweight Alibaba, which also owns the South China Morning Post.
However, advertising was the fastest growing segment for Tencent, up 34 per cent in the second quarter to 25 billion yuan due to rising demand for advertising on Video Accounts, the short video and live-streaming function within its flagship super-app WeChat.
ByteDance is now a direct competitor with Alibaba as Douyin, with more than 600 million daily active users, now relies on e-commerce as a key revenue pillar.
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ByteDance – whose initial public offering plans remain in limbo – has been trying to diversify its revenue sources, including expanding into food deliveries and hotel reservations, as income growth slows amid economic headwinds. Douyin remains its biggest cash cow as the video forum has evolved to become an all-in-one app with the capacity for built-in purchases, online meal delivery and grocery features.
ByteDance has faced strong geopolitical headwinds over the past few years. Its TikTok short video app has been banned on government devices in more than 30 states in the US, as well as in the European Union and Australia, on data security concerns.
For ByteDance, around US$5.8 billion, or 12 per cent of second-quarter sales, were generated from outside China, with the majority coming from TikTok, according to the The Information report.