China deepens review of Meta's $2 billion Manus acquisition over tech export concerns

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Beijing has expanded its investigation into Meta's $2 billion acquisition of Chinese-founded AI startup Manus, examining potential violations of tech export controls, cross-border currency flows, and tax accounting rules. The probe highlights concerns about foreign control of AI technology and spotlights the practice of 'Singapore-washing' by Chinese companies relocating to avoid regulatory oversight.

China Deepens Review of Meta Manus Acquisition Over National Security Concerns

Beijing is expanding its investigation into the Meta Manus acquisition, raising the possibility that Chinese regulators could seek to alter or even unwind the $2 billion deal if wrongdoing is discovered. Chinese officials initially began examining whether the December takeover of the Chinese-founded AI startup violated tech export or national security regulations, focusing on whether Chinese technology or user data could have been compromised or shared with an American company

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Source: Seeking Alpha

Source: Seeking Alpha

Regulators are now also investigating potential violations of rules governing cross-border currency flows, tax accounting violations, and overseas investments, according to people familiar with the matter

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. The broadening review highlights the regulatory scrutiny surrounding a rare US acquisition for Meta of an Asian tech company, marking the latest multibillion-dollar bet on China AI technology by Meta co-founder Mark Zuckerberg.

Concerns About Foreign Control of AI Technology and Data Transfers

The investigation has raised concerns in Beijing about an American firm gaining control of potentially sensitive, advanced Chinese AI technology. Manus's co-founders and parent company, Butterfly Effect, started operations in China before moving its headquarters and staff to Singapore. The AI startup attracted prominent early US backers including venture investor Benchmark during its rapid ascent

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Source: ET

Source: ET

The deal, which was struck over roughly 10 days, has been compared to major American companies acquiring well-regarded startups of Chinese origin that have been likened to OpenAI and DeepSeek. Meta hailed the transaction as an important step toward buttressing its effort to build agentic AI services that can perform tasks for users. The US parent intends to continue operating and selling the Manus service while also integrating the technology into its products, with Alexandr Wang, Meta's Chief AI Officer, welcoming the Manus team of about 100 staff

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Singapore-Washing Practice Draws Attention from Commerce Ministry

China's review has cast a spotlight on a practice dubbed Singapore-washing by the tech industry, referring to companies of Chinese origin that move their base to the city-state as a launchpad for overseas business. The island has proven popular with companies such as Shein because of the predominance of ethnic Chinese familiar with the language

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Source: Bloomberg

Source: Bloomberg

Manus began to relocate its staff to Singapore from Beijing and Wuhan in July, parting ways with dozens of employees unwilling to move at the time. That decampment caught the attention of Chinese regulators, which privately raised concerns around data transfers and taxes. The startup has focused on international markets almost from the outset, and its main agentic AI product has never been available in its country of origin. However, one of Butterfly Effect's previous products, Monica, a Chrome browser extension, is available in China

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What This Means for Future AI Deals and Tech Export Controls

The investigation into Meta's takeover remains preliminary given it closed mere weeks ago, and Beijing could ultimately decide not to take any action. Some officials had privately expressed support for Manus after the deal got announced, and Manus's backers have already gotten their money, making it practically difficult to unwind the transaction

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However, the probe raises concerns about technology and user data transfers, making similar deals more difficult and subject to greater regulatory scrutiny in the future

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. Manus captured the attention of investors in March when it released AI agents that help execute tasks for users, including screening resumes, creating trip itineraries and analyzing stocks in response to basic instructions. Since then, companies from ByteDance Ltd. to Baidu Inc. have followed suit with their own competing agentic AI platforms

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. Representatives for Meta and Manus declined to comment, while China's Commerce Ministry didn't respond to requests for comment.

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