China's National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has blocked Meta's $2 billion acquisition of Manus AI. The decision follows months of regulatory scrutiny that started earlier in the year, with Chinese authorities reviewing whether the transaction complied with export controls and technology transfer rules.
The NDRC said it made "a decision to prohibit foreign investment in the Manus project in accordance with laws and regulations" and "required the parties involved to withdraw the acquisition transaction."
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Chinese regulators framed the decision around national security concerns and tighter control over advanced AI technologies developed by Chinese-origin startups. The NDRC’s ruling also reflects a broader policy shift aimed at limiting the transfer of sensitive AI capabilities and talent outside the country.
Manus was founded in China before relocating to Singapore in mid-2025, a path that Chinese AI startups have used to operate outside Beijing's direct oversight while maintaining access to Western investment. China's Ministry of Commerce launched a probe into the acquisition in January, and Beijing banned two Manus co-founders from leaving the country in March, according to the Financial Times.
The block signals that relocating does not place Chinese-origin AI companies beyond Beijing's regulatory reach. Manus had raised $75 million from Benchmark in April 2025 before Meta's acquisition offer, and claimed $100 million in annual recurring revenue eight months after product launch. For AI founders and investors who have relied on the Singapore relocation model, the ruling introduces a new layer of risk to cross-border deals involving Chinese AI talent and intellectual property.
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The core value of Manus is not a traditional chatbot model. Instead, it focuses on AI agents that can carry out tasks without constant user prompts. These systems are designed to handle multi-step actions such as building reports, analyzing data, or managing workflows.
Meta’s interest in Manus AI is tied to its push into AI agents across its ecosystem amid the shift towards agentic advertising. The company announced the acquisition in December 2025 as part of its broader AI direction, which includes embedding agent-like systems into apps such as Instagram, WhatsApp, and Meta AI. In the months since, Manus had been integrated into Meta's Ads Manager and the Instagram Creator Marketplace. Manus described the Ads Manager feature as "having a professional AI ads analyst directly within your Manus workspace."
Unwinding the deal raises questions about the continuity of those integrations. Manus runs on multiple AI models and had given Meta a working agent platform as it competes with OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic in AI-assisted advertising and creator tools.
Recap
Why did China block Meta's Manus acquisition?
China's National Development and Reform Commission issued an order prohibiting foreign investment in the Manus project and requiring both parties to withdraw the transaction. The decision followed a Ministry of Commerce probe launched in January and a travel ban on two Manus co-founders imposed in March.
What happens to Manus tools inside Meta's ad products?
Manus had been integrated into Meta's Ads Manager and the Instagram Creator Marketplace before the ruling. Unwinding the acquisition raises questions about the future of those integrations and the AI agent capabilities they provided to advertisers and creators.
What is the Singapore relocation model for Chinese AI startups?
Some Chinese AI startups have relocated to Singapore to operate outside Beijing's direct oversight while maintaining access to Western investment and partnerships. China's decision to block the Manus deal despite the relocation signals that this path does not place companies beyond Beijing's regulatory reach.






