The order phase is over. The execution phase has begun.
Beijing’s forced divestiture of Meta’s $2B Manus acquisition, confirmed by the Wall Street Journal on national security grounds, has moved from regulatory decree to active commercial negotiation. Meta initiated operational separation from Manus on June 13. According to Crypto Briefing, the original investor group, reported to include HSG, ZhenFund, and Tencent, is now negotiating to repurchase Manus at its original $2B acquisition price. That consortium composition and repurchase price could not be independently verified.
The financing question is also in motion. Crypto Briefing reports the consortium is exploring a $1B capital raise to fund the transaction; this figure could not be independently verified. The structure, if it holds, would cover roughly half the repurchase price through new capital while existing investors absorb the remainder, a meaningful signal that the group views Manus as worth funding at full price, not discounting, despite the forced exit.
Verification
Partial WSJ (T2) confirmed core event; Crypto Briefing (T3) only for consortium names, $1B raise, ARR figures Consortium composition, repurchase price, and financing structure are single-source trade publication claims, not independently verifiedWhy does this matter to AI investors? A $2B acquisition reversal on national security grounds, ordered over a Singapore-headquartered company, establishes that Beijing’s jurisdictional reach extends beyond companies incorporated in China. The NDRC’s assertion of authority over Manus, whose Singapore domicile was presumably part of its international structuring, rewrites the risk calculus for cross-border AI M&A. This isn’t a routine regulatory approval process. It’s a post-close reversal, which operates on a different threat timeline than pre-deal review.
This is the latest in a documented pattern. The TJS Markets hub has tracked Beijing’s initial June 14 divestiture order and the broader arc of government-driven AI asset unwinds. The Manus reversal joins a growing ledger of cross-border technology deals unwound or suspended on national security grounds in 2026, a pattern worth tracking not as an anomaly but as a feature of the current M&A environment.
On Manus’s financial trajectory: Crypto Briefing estimates the company’s annualized revenue has grown substantially under Meta ownership, reportedly reaching between $400M and $500M, this figure is a source inference from a single trade publication and could not be independently verified. If directionally accurate, it would mean Manus grew materially during Meta’s ownership period, which makes the forced unwinding a more complex negotiation than a simple asset return.
What to Watch
What to watch
whether the reported $1B capital raise gets confirmed by a T1 or source, which would validate or contradict the Crypto Briefing report. Watch also for any NDRC filing or official Chinese government statement that names the specific national security basis, that document, if it becomes public, would tell the market exactly which AI capabilities triggered the intervention. The Q3 timeline for the Manus divestiture to formally close will also clarify how quickly Beijing expects execution, not just order issuance.
The real story isn’t the repurchase price. It’s that Beijing can order a closed $2B deal to unwind after the fact, and the market is still pricing in whether that capability is isolated to China or is a template other jurisdictions will adopt. Compliance teams at firms with cross-border AI M&A exposure should be updating their jurisdictional risk assessments now, not at the next deal announcement.