AppLovin Corp. pushed back sharply against allegations from a short seller that it has ties to a multibillion-dollar money-laundering network, rejecting claims that its technology and shareholder base were used to funnel illicit funds through the mobile advertising ecosystem.
Shares of the Palo Alto–based company fell as much as 4.7% in late trading on Wednesday after CapitalWatch, a short-selling outfit, published a report alleging that AppLovin serves as a “safe haven” for proceeds linked to Chinese Ponzi schemes and Cambodian fraud operations.
AppLovin is listed on Nasdaq under the ticker APP.
In an emailed statement, the company described the report as “rife with false, misleading, and nonsensical allegations,” saying it categorically rejected claims about its capital structure, platform governance and global operations.
As a publicly traded company, AppLovin said, it cannot control who buys or sells its shares on the open market.
Focus on shareholders andthe AI platform
CapitalWatch’s report centred on Hao Tang, described as a major shareholder allegedly connected to the collapse of Chinese peer-to-peer lender Tuandai.com.
The short seller claimed Tang’s stake represented laundered proceeds from illegal fundraising, language AppLovin said was inflammatory and unsupported.
The report also accused AppLovin’s AI-driven AXON advertising system and so-called “Silent Install” tools of acting as “digital weapons” for criminal syndicates, allowing illicit funds to be transformed into legitimate advertising revenue through fabricated app-store transactions.
AppLovin disputed those claims, saying its advertising platform operates within a tightly regulated ecosystem that includes major app stores, operating systems and payment providers.
Apps monetising through AppLovin must be publicly listed on mainstream app stores and are subject to independent review and supervision, the company said.
Economic logic and compliance defenses
The company emphasised that it runs multilayered compliance checks, including Know Your Customer and tax verification, combined with automated and manual reviews. It also prohibits illegal or sensitive content and removes participants who violate platform rules.
From an economic standpoint, AppLovin argued the allegations are implausible.
Advertising intermediaries receive only a fraction of the money spent by advertisers, meaning any attempt to launder funds would require forfeiting significant capital while creating a highly visible, auditable transaction trail across multiple entities.
Accepting the short seller’s premise, AppLovin said, would imply a systemic failure of the broader mobile advertising and app-store ecosystem — a conclusion the report fails to substantiate with evidence.
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