Founders often ask: “Will more US tech giants buy Asian startups?”
The sharper question is: if only a small fraction of companies generate most of the returns, can you afford to build anything that isn’t capable of becoming a global outlier?
Meta’s US$2+ billion acquisition of Manus—a company founded in Beijing, redomiciled in Singapore, and integrated into Meta’s AI stack in under a year—is not just a China‑US‑Singapore story. It’s a concrete example of how to design a company that can scale across borders, survive geopolitics, and be acquirable at speed.
What Manus Actually Did
Manus launched publicly around March 2025 with an AI agent that could autonomously research, code, and execute multi‑step workflows. Within roughly eight months it reportedly crossed US$100 million in ARR, reaching a US$125 million revenue run rate before Meta signed the deal.
Operationally, it:
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Processed over 147 trillion tokens and supported tens of millions of “virtual computers” spun up by users, which only makes sense at global internet scale.
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Ran as an orchestration and agent layer on top of multiple foundation models (including Anthropic and Alibaba’s Qwen), avoiding dependence on a single model provider.
On the corporate side, Manus:
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Started in Wuhan and Beijing under Beijing Butterfly Effect Technology, with a mostly China‑based team.
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Shifted its headquarters to Singapore in mid‑2025, moving leadership and critical operations out of Beijing.
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Restructured so that, by the time Meta announced the acquisition, Chinese ownership and on‑the‑ground China operations would be fully unwound; the company committed to ceasing services in China.
Meta bought a product already scaled, a revenue engine compounding at nine‑figure ARR, and a structure that could clear US regulatory and political review.
Geopolitics as a Design Constraint
Manus scaled in the wake of DeepSeek’s R1 moment, when a Chinese lab demonstrated frontier‑class performance at a fraction of Western compute budgets and shook confidence in US AI dominance. That moment accelerated a narrative where AI is treated as strategic infrastructure: tighter export controls, outbound investment restrictions on Chinese AI, and public scrutiny of anyone funding Chinese‑linked AI companies.
Benchmark’s US$75 million Series B in Manus was investigated under Washington’s new outbound regime and criticized as “funding the adversary.” Two details mattered:
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Manus did not train its own foundation models; it built agents on top of existing ones, placing it in a less‑restricted category.
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It was structured via Cayman and Singapore, with a stated pivot away from China.
Meta then finished the derisking: buying out Chinese shareholders, committing to end China operations, and framing Manus as a Singapore‑based AI business joining Meta.
For founders, the lesson is blunt: jurisdiction, ownership and market footprint now sit beside product and traction as first‑order design choices. They can’t be an afterthought if you want a strategic buyer.
What This Implies for How You Build
The Manus story turns a vague ambition (“go global”) into specific requirements:
1. Infrastructure built for real scale
Handling 147 trillion tokens and millions of ephemeral environments was possible only because Manus was architected from day one to operate like a web‑scale SaaS, not a regional tool. As a founder, that means:
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Cloud‑native design with serious observability and reliability.
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Data and compliance posture that won’t collapse under US or EU due diligence.
2. A team that isn’t anchored to one country
Manus began in China but rapidly built a presence across Singapore, Tokyo and San Francisco, aligning product, sales and hiring with global customers and capital pools. Practically:
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At least one founder or senior leader who has operated in major tech hubs.
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Early design partners or users outside your home market.
3. Legal and cap table flexibility
Manus showed that unlocking a large exit might require:
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Redomiciling to a neutral or “trusted” jurisdiction like Singapore.
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Reworking the shareholder base to remove politically sensitive investors.
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Exiting a big home market entirely, if that market blocks strategic buyers.
If your current structure makes those moves impossible or prohibitively expensive, your future options are already constrained.
4. Revenue ambition that assumes a global customer
Crossing US$100M ARR in under a year is only achievable if:
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The problem you solve is universal.
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Your pricing and packaging make sense for large customers in New York, Berlin or Tokyo, not just in your home market.
You can start with regional customers, but you should be honest about whether the 100th customer could be a global enterprise rather than just a better‑known local logo.
Three Questions to Ask Yourself Now
If you’re a founder in an emerging market post‑Manus, a simple self‑audit goes a long way:
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If a Meta‑scale acquirer appeared in 12 months, what would break first—structure, regulation, or infra?
Make that list explicit. Those are not “later” issues anymore. -
Could your current architecture handle a 100x increase in usage without a total rebuild?
If not, you’re placing an invisible ceiling on your own upside before power‑law dynamics can ever help you. -
Do your first 10 hires and first 10 customers make expansion easier or harder?
Manus’ user base and team footprint made going beyond its origin market feel like scaling, not reinventing.
The Manus deal doesn’t suggest everyone will be bought for billions. It does show that markets are now rewarding teams that design for scale across borders, anticipate geopolitical friction, and stay acquirable.
If you’re serious about building something that matters, that’s the bar.