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Tencent in Talks to Lead $2B Manus Buyback After Beijing Forces Meta to Unwind AI Agent Acquisition

$2B buyback
3 min read CNBC Partial Moderate
Tencent is in advanced talks to become Manus's largest shareholder as part of an effort to unwind Meta Platforms' acquisition of the AI agent startup, following a Chinese regulatory order requiring divestiture. Meta has already completed an operational split from Manus and halted data sharing between the two companies.
Manus buyback valuation, ~$2B

Key Takeaways

  • Tencent is in advanced talks to lead a buyback of Manus at approximately $2 billion, per the Financial Times, no signed agreement confirmed
  • China's NDRC issued a divestiture order on April 27, 2026, citing foreign investment security review grounds; Meta was required to unwind the acquisition
  • Meta has completed an operational split from Manus, halting data sharing and barring employees from using Manus tools internally, per Bloomberg
  • Original Manus backers ZhenFund and HSG are rejoining the cap table alongside Tencent, suggesting the original investors anticipated this exit path

Timeline

2025-12-01 Meta acquires Manus for $2B+
2026-04-27 NDRC issues divestiture order via Foreign Investment Security Review
2026-07-01 Meta completes operational split, halts data sharing
2026-07-10 Tencent named as lead buyer in $2B buyback talks

The deal that gave Meta a foothold in agentic AI is being reversed, and Beijing is the reason. The Financial Times reports that Tencent is in advanced talks to become Manus’s largest shareholder, leading a consortium that also includes ZhenFund and HSG, the startup’s original venture backers. The buyback is structured to reflect the original acquisition value of approximately $2 billion, per FT reporting. No signed agreement has been confirmed.

The sequence matters. China’s National Development and Reform Commission issued a divestiture order on April 27, 2026, requiring Meta to unwind its acquisition of Manus through the country’s Foreign Investment Security Review Mechanism. Reuters confirmed that the NDRC’s action centered on cross-border investment security grounds. The specific involvement of data security rules as a separately cited regulatory basis hasn’t been independently confirmed; the documented regulatory trigger is foreign investment security review. That distinction matters for anyone modeling how Beijing’s review mechanism applies to future deals.

What happened, step by step: Meta acquired Manus in late 2025 for more than $2 billion. The NDRC order came April 27, 2026. Bloomberg confirmed that Meta has since completed an operational split from Manus, halted data sharing between the two companies, and directed employees to stop using Manus tools internally. Tencent’s emergence as the lead buyback buyer is the latest development, the talks are ongoing, not closed.

Why it matters

This isn’t just a deal story. It’s the first confirmed case of China’s foreign investment security review mechanism forcing the reversal of a completed cross-border AI acquisition involving a company headquartered outside mainland China. Manus is Singapore-incorporated, but its Chinese-origin founders brought it within the NDRC’s review scope. That’s the structural precedent. Any acquirer of an AI company with Chinese-origin founders, Chinese investor backing, or Chinese user data now has to price in the possibility that Beijing can rewind the transaction, even after closing.

Manus Ownership Restructuring, Key Players

Meta Platforms
against
Exiting under NDRC order; operational split completed
Tencent
for
In talks as lead buyback buyer; acquisition is strategic, not just regulatory
ZhenFund & HSG
for
Original VCs rejoining cap table alongside Tencent
China NDRC
neutral
Issued foreign investment security review order April 27, 2026; enforcing divestiture
Manus
neutral
Regaining operational independence through the split; buyback pending

The real story is what the buyback consortium tells us about Tencent’s strategy. ZhenFund and HSG recovering their positions alongside Tencent suggests the original investors had contingency plans for exactly this scenario. Tencent, for its part, gets a leading position in one of the most-watched agentic AI platforms at a moment when the field is consolidating fast. This is an opportunistic acquisition dressed as a regulatory resolution.

Context

The Manus divestiture doesn’t stand alone. Reuters has reported on broader Chinese efforts to expand curbs on foreign deals and tech transfer following this case, suggesting the NDRC’s intervention here may signal a more active posture toward cross-border AI investment going forward. Whether that posture becomes a sustained pattern or remains targeted enforcement is still an open question.

What to watch

Watch for deal closure terms, specifically, whether Tencent acquires a controlling stake or a plurality position, and what operational conditions Beijing attaches to the buyback structure. Watch also for any secondary regulatory guidance from the NDRC clarifying which cross-border AI acquisitions fall within the Foreign Investment Security Review Mechanism’s scope. The first formal guidance document would be the signal that this mechanism is being institutionalized, not just applied case by case.

What to Watch

Tencent-Manus deal closure and final equity structureQ3 2026
NDRC guidance document on cross-border AI acquisition scopeQ3–Q4 2026
Other Chinese-origin AI startups held by Western acquirers facing review noticesRolling

TJS synthesis

Don’t bet on this being the last Beijing-mandated AI M&A reversal. The Manus case has established that the NDRC’s Foreign Investment Security Review Mechanism applies to Singapore-incorporated companies with Chinese-origin founders, that the mechanism can be triggered post-close, and that operational separation is enforceable before a buyback structure is finalized. Corporate development teams evaluating AI acquisitions with any Chinese-founder or Chinese-VC thread now have a live case study, and the answer to “can Beijing reverse this after closing” is confirmed yes. Watch for the Q3 pipeline: if other Chinese-origin AI startups acquired by Western companies face similar review notices, the Manus case shifts from precedent to policy.

Sources: CNBC, Reuters, Bloomberg, TechCrunch, Financial Times.

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