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Tencent in Talks for Majority Stake in Manus at $2B After Meta Deal Blocked

Tencent is buying a majority stake in AI agent startup Manus at $2B valuation after Beijing blocked Meta's acquisition. Manus reported ~$500M annual revenue.

Tencent is negotiating a majority stake in AI agent startup Manus at a $2 billion valuation. Beijing forced Meta to unwind its own $2 billion Manus acquisition in April.

Key facts

  • Tencent negotiating majority stake at $2B valuation.
  • Beijing blocked Meta's $2B Manus acquisition in April.
  • Manus reported ~$500M annual revenue.
  • Founder Xiao Hong under exit ban by China.
  • Manus to remain independent out of Singapore.

Tencent is in talks to buy a majority stake in AI agent startup Manus at the same $2 billion valuation, according to the Financial Times, after Beijing blocked Meta's acquisition. The deal would make Tencent the largest external shareholder in Manus, which Tencent sees as overlapping with its own AI agent strategy, including plans to embed an agent into WeChat.

Most earlier investors, including Tencent, ZhenFund, and HSG, plus the management team, are discussing a deal at the same $2 billion valuation. U.S. firm Benchmark is not expected to take part. Manus will keep operating independently out of Singapore and most recently reported annual revenue of close to $500 million.

China blocked Meta's Manus acquisition in April, calling it a violation of investment rules, and imposed an exit ban on founder Xiao Hong. Officials described the deal as a "conspiratorial" attempt to undermine China's tech base and banned foreign investment in Manus. The decision fits into a broader AI arms race between the two countries, where the technology is already being compared to "cyber-nuclear weapons of the AI era" given recent advances in AI-driven cybersecurity attacks.

Key Takeaways

  • Tencent is buying a majority stake in AI agent startup Manus at $2B valuation after Beijing blocked Meta's acquisition.
  • Manus reported ~$500M annual revenue.

Strategic Implications

Tencent joins China's AI spending race with 2025 capex boost

The Tencent-Manus deal underscores Beijing's tightening grip on AI agent technology deemed strategically critical. By blocking Meta and greenlighting Tencent, China signals it will keep frontier agentic AI under domestic control. Tencent's recent launch of Hunyuan Hy3, a 295B MoE model claiming 90% agent task resolution [per Tencent's July 6 announcement], suggests the company sees agents as core to its platform — WeChat integration would give Manus access to over 1.3 billion monthly active users.

For Meta, the failed acquisition leaves a gap in its agentic AI strategy. The company has been ramping compute for superintelligence [as reported July 9] and released Muse Spark 1.1 for agentic coding [July 10], but lacks the independent agent platform Manus represents. The $2 billion valuation — roughly 4x trailing revenue of $500M — suggests Manus was growing fast but not yet profitable, typical for AI startups in this cycle.

What to watch

Watch for the deal's regulatory approval timeline and whether Tencent discloses the stake percentage. Also monitor Manus's next revenue disclosure — $500M may accelerate if WeChat integration begins. Meta's next move in agentic AI, possibly via acquisition of a smaller player, will signal its alternative strategy.


Source: the-decoder.com


Originally published on gentic.news

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