Meta had been moving fast in the AI agent space. In December, it announced a deal to acquire Manus — an AI agent built by startup Butterfly Effect, originally founded in China but operating out of Singapore.
The price tag? More than $2 billion, according to Bloomberg Intelligence analysts.
Manus had made a splash early last year, with Chinese state media calling it the country’s next DeepSeek after it launched what it claimed was the world’s first general AI agent. It can do things like screen resumes or build a stock analysis website.
Meta Platforms, Inc., META
But analysts flagged at the time that the deal faced real regulatory risk, given the ongoing tech rivalry between the US and China.
Those concerns proved well-founded.
In March, things took a sharp turn. Manus CEO Xiao Hong and chief scientist Ji Yichao were summoned to Beijing and told they could not leave China while regulators reviewed the deal. Both are normally based in Singapore.
On Monday, China’s National Development and Reform Commission made it official — the acquisition is blocked. The NDRC said it would “prohibit the foreign investment in the acquisition of the Manus project” and ordered all parties to withdraw from the transaction.
The move is being watched closely. Manus had relocated its headquarters from China to Singapore — a step many Chinese companies have taken to reduce exposure to US-China tensions. But that move offered no protection here.
The NDRC’s intervention could also put a new item on the agenda for the planned mid-May summit between President Trump and President Xi Jinping.
Meta stock fell 2.41% on the news.
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