TL;DR
Tencent is selling about 273 million Kuaishou shares (a 7.5% stake) in a block trade worth up to $1.55-1.6bn, cutting its holding to roughly 9.37% from 15.68%. The selldown lands just after Tencent helped fund Kuaishou’s Kling AI spinoff, reading as a rotation from mature short video into generative AI.
Tencent is seeking up to $1.6bn by selling down its stake in short-video platform Kuaishou, Bloomberg reports. A term sheet seen by Reuters puts the block trade at up to $1.55bn.
The deal covers about 273 million shares, a 7.5% stake, offered at HK$43.15 to HK$44.53 each. That represents a discount of 3.2% to 6.2% to Monday’s close in Hong Kong.
The sale cuts Tencent’s holding in its long-time ally from 15.68% to about 9.37%, and Kuaishou confirmed the off-market disposal in an exchange filing. Kuaishou has meanwhile pressed ahead with its own share buybacks.
Tencent has form here, having trimmed or distributed stakes in JD.com and Meituan in recent years when it judged the holdings mature. It remains one of the most consequential balance sheets in Chinese tech.
Selling the app, backing the AI
The timing is pointed, since the selldown comes shortly after Tencent joined a $2.8bn financing for Kling AI, Kuaishou’s generative video unit. Kling raised an initial $2bn as Kuaishou spun it off at a valuation of about $18bn.
That round became a geopolitical flashpoint when General Atlantic sought to lead it just as Beijing pushed its AI firms to refuse US money. Chinese investors, Tencent among them, filled the gap.
The trade reads as a rotation out of the mature short-video business and into the AI layer growing on top of it. Kuaishou’s home market is fertile ground, with China’s $16.5bn micro-drama industry becoming the first mass application of AI-generated video.
Tencent’s ties to Kuaishou stretch back through years of jointly fighting ByteDance for short-video attention. And it has plenty of other calls on its capital, including a reported $3bn domestic memory deal with CXMT as it builds out AI infrastructure.
For Kuaishou, a shrinking anchor investor stings less when that investor is simultaneously funding its future. Tencent is not leaving the table, it is changing seats.


