China blocks Meta’s $2B Manus deal after months-long probe

TechCrunch / 4/27/2026

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Key Points

  • China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has blocked Meta’s $2B acquisition of agentic AI startup Manus, ordering the deal to be fully unwound after a months-long probe.
  • The NDRC said it is prohibiting foreign investment in the Manus project under applicable laws and required both parties to withdraw from the transaction, without providing detailed reasons.
  • The decision is a major cross-border intervention that goes beyond U.S.-China tensions and could significantly hinder Meta’s ambitions in the fast-moving AI agents space.
  • Despite the block, many Manus employees had already moved into Meta’s Singapore offices, with founders reportedly taking executive roles; some key leaders are also reportedly subject to exit bans preventing them from leaving mainland China.
  • Meta stated that the transaction complied with applicable law and expects an appropriate resolution to the regulatory inquiry.

China’s top economic planner, the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), said on Monday it has blocked Meta’s $2 billion acquisition of Manus, an agentic AI startup founded by Chinese engineers that relocated to Singapore before Mark Zuckerberg scooped it up late last year.

The move marks one of China’s most significant interventions in a cross-border deal, one that extends well beyond U.S.-China tensions and into the broader AI industry. For Meta, it could deal a serious blow to its ambitions in the fast-moving AI agents space.

With no explanation offered, China’s NDRC ordered both parties to unwind the deal entirely.

“The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has made a decision to prohibit foreign investment in the Manus project in accordance with laws and regulations, and has required the parties involved to withdraw the acquisition transaction,” it said.

But the situation is far from straightforward. Around  100 Manus employees have already moved into Meta’s Singapore offices as of March, with founders taking on executive roles. CEO Xiao Hong now reports directly to Meta COO Javier Olivan. Manus CEO Hong and Chief Scientist Yichao Ji are reportedly under exit bans, preventing them from leaving mainland China.

“The transaction complied fully with applicable law. We anticipate an appropriate resolution to the inquiry,” a spokesperson at Meta told TechCrunch.

Founded in 2022 by Hong, Ji and Tao Zhang, Manus relocated its headquarters from China to Singapore around mid-2025. Just months later, Meta came knocking. The company announced its acquisition of Manus in December 2025 for roughly $2 billion to $3 billion, with plans to fold its agent technology directly into Meta AI.

Meta has agreed to acquire Singapore-based AI startup Manus, with the deal requiring a full exit from Chinese ownership and operations, per Nikkei Asia. But the company’s origins trace back to China. Manus’ founders previously established its parent company, Butterfly Effect, in Beijing in 2022 before relocating to Singapore. That background has drawn scrutiny in Washington, where Senator John Cornyn has already raised concerns about Benchmark’s investment in the company, questioning whether American capital should be flowing to a Chinese-linked firm, TechCrunch pointed out, citing Cornyn’s post on X.

Manus did not respond to TechCrunch’s request for comment.