China’s order for Meta Platforms to unwind its $2 billion acquisition of artificial intelligence startup Manus is less about a single deal and more about a broader tension shaping the country’s tech strategy: how to build global champions without losing control.
The episode highlights a recurring dilemma for Beijing.
While policymakers want domestic firms to compete internationally and attract foreign capital, they remain wary of companies moving offshore and slipping beyond regulatory reach.
Beijing reasserts control over offshore ambitions
Manus, founded about a year ago by engineers Red Xiao and Ji Yichao, initially operated under a Chinese parent but later relocated to Singapore.
The startup gained attention in Silicon Valley for its AI agents capable of handling complex tasks such as booking travel and managing spreadsheets with minimal human input.
Meta had said Manus “would exit China entirely with no residual ownership there,” underscoring the company’s shift away from its home market.
After securing $75 million from US venture capital firm Benchmark in May 2025, Manus shut its China offices, laid off staff, and moved operations abroad.
Employees were subsequently integrated into Meta’s Singapore offices.
China’s National Development and Reform Commission has since intervened, stating it would “prohibit foreign investment in Manus in accordance with laws and regulations, and requires the parties involved to withdraw the acquisition transaction.”
Reuters reported that the company’s co-founders were barred from leaving China during the review, signaling Beijing’s effort to reassert authority after the firm’s offshore transition.
Deal reversal underscores structural constraints
Unwinding the acquisition presents significant legal and operational challenges.
Questions remain over how Meta will recover funds from earlier investors, including Chinese tech group Tencent, and whether those investments must also be reversed.
The integration of Manus into Meta’s operations complicates matters further.
Once personnel, code, and intellectual property are embedded, separating them becomes increasingly difficult.
Meta said: “The transaction complied fully with applicable law. We anticipate an appropriate resolution to the inquiry.”
At the same time, China’s leverage is limited.
Meta’s core platforms, including Facebook and Instagram, do not operate in the country, reducing the tools available to regulators.
AI ambitions collide with global capital realities
The dispute reflects deeper tensions in China’s artificial intelligence push.
Authorities appear to have underestimated Manus’s strategic importance until after it relocated and was acquired, prompting a delayed regulatory response.
The fallout is also likely to feature in upcoming US-China diplomatic discussions, adding a geopolitical layer to the issue.
For entrepreneurs, the signal is clear: relocating overseas to tap global capital does not guarantee insulation from domestic oversight.
The timing is particularly sensitive. US AI startups raised nearly $270 billion in the first quarter, more than 13 times the funding secured by Chinese peers, according to a KPMG report.
While Manus illustrates China’s ambitions in cutting-edge technology, the episode also underscores the limits those ambitions face as regulatory priorities and global expansion goals collide.
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