Sometimes the biggest corporate victories don't come from brilliant strategy or billion-dollar product launches. Sometimes they come from a political decision made five years ago that nobody saw coming.
Meta Platforms Inc. (META) just won its antitrust fight against the FTC, and Mark Zuckerberg can thank TikTok for it. Yes, the same TikTok that's been eating Facebook's lunch with younger users. The same one that nearly got kicked out of the country back in 2020.
When Saving Your Competitor Saves You
Judge James Boasberg delivered the verdict on Tuesday, tossing out the FTC's monopoly case with a straightforward conclusion: Meta can't be a monopoly when TikTok exists. The ruling hinged on the fact that TikTok and YouTube offer "nearly identical" features to Facebook and Instagram, creating real competition in social media.
Here's where it gets interesting. Back in 2020, President Donald Trump pushed hard for a "ban-or-sell" ultimatum that would have forced TikTok out of the U.S. market entirely. Then he reversed course, later admitting that banning TikTok would "help Facebook too much." That decision kept TikTok alive in America, and this week it became the cornerstone of Meta's legal defense.
The judge's reasoning was blunt: "TikTok alone" defeats the FTC's monopoly claim. If TikTok is thriving and competing directly with Meta's products, then Meta doesn't have monopoly power. It's a perfectly logical legal argument made possible entirely because Trump changed his mind five years ago.
The Dog That Didn't Bark
For investors, this should be massive news. Meta just eliminated the existential regulatory threat that's been hanging over the company since 2020. The breakup risk that kept some institutional investors cautious? Gone.
Yet Meta's stock barely budged on the news. Wall Street appears more concerned with AI infrastructure spending, competition from the very TikTok that saved them in court, and regulatory pressures overseas. The market's telling you something: removing tail risk matters less than the day-to-day battle for attention and ad dollars.
Still, there's something beautifully ironic about the whole situation. Meta's biggest legal victory in years came courtesy of a competitor it once viewed as an existential threat, kept alive by a president who explicitly didn't want to help Meta. In tech regulation, sometimes the unintended consequences matter more than anyone's actual plan.