
The Manus deal comes as Mark Zuckerberg, Meta chief executive, seeks to develop ‘personal superintelligence’ © Bloomberg
Meta has agreed to acquire AI startup Manus for more than $2 billion.
The move signals a rare U.S. purchase of an advanced AI firm with Chinese roots.
The deal highlights Meta’s aggressive push to dominate the global AI race.
Meta confirmed it will operate and sell the Manus service independently.
The company also plans to integrate Manus technology into Meta AI products.
Financial terms were not officially disclosed by Meta.
Meta AI Strategy Takes a Bold Turn
The Manus acquisition fits directly into Meta’s expanding AI strategy.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg is investing heavily to challenge OpenAI and Google.
He aims to build what he calls “personal superintelligence” for consumers.
Meta is pouring billions into AI infrastructure and elite research talent.
The company has already acquired several smaller AI startups this year.
Manus now becomes one of Meta’s most significant AI bets.
What Makes Manus a Valuable AI Asset
Manus is known as a leading autonomous general-purpose AI agent.
Its tools handle market research, coding, and complex data analysis.
Businesses can subscribe to Manus services starting at $20 per month.
Meta described Manus as a highly sophisticated digital helper.
The platform is designed to work independently with minimal human input.
This capability aligns with Meta’s long-term AI automation goals.
A Landmark Acquisition by Meta
An early Manus investor said the deal ranks among Meta’s largest purchases.
It follows the $19 billion WhatsApp acquisition in 2014.
It also trails Meta’s recent $15 billion investment in Scale AI.
ZhenFund partner Liu Yuan praised the acquisition on social media.
He said the deal reflects the rise of young Chinese AI entrepreneurs.
Liu also noted Zuckerberg has been a longtime Manus user.
Political Sensitivities Around the Deal
The Meta-Manus deal may attract scrutiny in Washington and Beijing.
AI competition has become a sensitive issue in U.S.-China relations.
Cross-border tech acquisitions now face growing political resistance.
Manus is owned by Butterfly Effect, once compared to DeepSeek.
Earlier this year, Butterfly Effect raised funding led by Benchmark.
That deal drew criticism from U.S. lawmakers skeptical of China-linked AI.
Singapore Relocation and Industry Backlash
The Manus team relocated operations to Singapore earlier this year.
Some Chinese media outlets labeled the move as defection.
The company currently employs around 100 staff worldwide.
Li Chengdong of Haitun think-tank commented on the shift.
He said Chinese AI entrepreneurs are iterating faster than global peers.
He warned that talent loss could weaken China’s tech ambitions.
Meta Expands Hiring in Singapore
AI entrepreneur Alexandr Wang now leads Meta’s AI efforts.
Wang confirmed Meta is recruiting heavily in Singapore.
The Manus team will continue operating from the region.
This regional expansion supports Meta’s global AI development strategy.
Singapore offers talent access and regulatory stability.
It also positions Meta closer to Asian innovation hubs.
Pressure to Monetize Massive AI Spending
Zuckerberg faces growing pressure to justify Meta’s AI investments.
Investors want clearer revenue paths from AI products.
Meta serves millions of advertisers and enterprise customers globally.
The company is testing premium subscriptions for Meta AI.
Potential features include booking tools and AI-powered video creation.
These trials aim to turn AI innovation into sustainable revenue.
Manus Leadership Welcomes the Move
Manus CEO Xiao Hong welcomed the acquisition in a statement.
He said joining Meta strengthens Manus without altering its operations.
Decision-making and product direction will remain unchanged.
The Meta-Manus deal underscores AI’s growing geopolitical importance.
It also shows how top tech firms are racing for strategic advantage.
For Meta, Manus could be a defining piece of its AI future.

