The Fresh Era of Tech Nationalism: Beyond the Legal Address
The recent directive from China’s National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) to unwind Meta’s $2 billion-plus acquisition of Manus marks a pivotal shift in global tech M&A. For years, startups have utilized a strategy known as “Singapore-washing”—relocating headquarters to the city-state to bypass the geopolitical frictions between Washington and Beijing. But, the Manus case suggests that the era of the “legal loophole” is closing.
Regulators are no longer simply looking at where a company is incorporated. Instead, they are scrutinizing the “DNA” of the organization: the nationality of the founders, the origin of the intellectual property, and the location of the core R&D. When the NDRC prohibited foreign investment in Manus, it sent a clear signal that relocating a parent company—in this case, Butterfly Effect—does not erase the historical and technical ties to its country of origin.
The Death of the “Singapore-Wash”
For many Chinese AI firms, Singapore offered a neutral ground to access Western venture capital and advanced AI models. By re-incorporating abroad, firms hoped to avoid both U.S. Investment restrictions on Chinese AI and Chinese rules limiting the transfer of IP and capital overseas.
But as Ben Chester Cheong of the Singapore University of Social Sciences notes, the compliance threshold has risen. The Manus acquisition demonstrates that the “origin of the technology” and the “location of core R&D” are now primary metrics for security reviews. This creates a precarious environment for founders who find themselves caught between two superpowers, as seen with Manus CEO Xiao Hong and chief scientist Ji Yichao, who were barred from leaving China following regulatory talks.
The High-Stakes Battle for AI Agents
The intensity of this regulatory crackdown is driven by the specific nature of the technology at play. Meta didn’t acquire Manus for a standard large language model (LLM); they acquired it to bolster their perform on AI agents.

Unlike traditional AI, which generates text or images, AI agents are designed to autonomously execute complex tasks—such as building websites, writing research reports, and preparing presentation slides—with minimal human intervention. Because these agents operate as a framework on top of existing models, they represent a “force multiplier” for productivity and strategic capability.
From Models to Action: Why Agents Are the New Frontier
The shift from “Chatbots” to “Agents” changes the national security calculus. When a company possesses the capability to automate complex professional workflows, that technology becomes a strategic asset. Here’s why the NDRC is viewing the Manus deal not just as a corporate merger, but as a “potential transfer of strategic technology, data, and know-how.”
As AI agents grow more integrated into enterprise software, One can expect to see more “blocking” actions. The precedent set by the Manus deal suggests that any technology capable of autonomous action will be treated with the same scrutiny as advanced semiconductors or quantum computing.
Navigating a Bifurcated Tech Ecosystem
We are moving toward a “bifurcated” AI landscape where the global tech stack is split into two distinct spheres. On one side, U.S.-led ecosystems with strict controls on chip exports; on the other, a Chinese ecosystem focused on domestic self-reliance and preventing “brain drain.”
This geopolitical tension is creating a “compliance minefield” for cross-border transactions. The Manus case is not an isolated incident; it follows a pattern of increased scrutiny, similar to the friction seen in the $23 billion sale of ports by CK Hutchison to a BlackRock-led consortium.
The “Origin-Based” Regulatory Framework
According to legal experts like Carl Li of Zhong Lun, the regulatory lens has expanded. Future deals in sensitive sectors will likely be analyzed based on:

- Historical Operations: Where did the initial R&D take place?
- Data Flows: Where is the training data sourced and stored?
- Founding Team: What is the nationality and current location of the core architects?
- Offshore Restructuring: Was the move abroad a genuine business pivot or a regulatory evasion?
For investors, Which means that “due diligence” must now include a geopolitical risk assessment that goes far beyond legal paperwork. Understanding the “nationality” of the technology is now as critical as understanding the valuation of the company.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is “Singapore-washing” in the tech industry?
This proves the practice of Chinese startups relocating their headquarters and legal incorporation to Singapore to avoid regulatory scrutiny from both the U.S. And Chinese governments and to gain easier access to international capital.
Why did China block the Meta-Manus deal?
The NDRC cited “laws and regulations” regarding foreign investment, aiming to prevent the transfer of strategic AI talent and intellectual property to a U.S. Firm.
What are AI agents, and why are they strategically important?
AI agents are tools that can autonomously carry out complex tasks (like coding or market research) with minimal human input. They are seen as a critical leap in productivity and national strategic capability.
Can a company avoid these restrictions by moving abroad?
The Manus case suggests that moving the legal headquarters is no longer sufficient. Regulators are now looking at the origin of the technology and the nationality of the founding team.
What do you think? Is the rise of “tech nationalism” an inevitable result of the AI arms race, or is it stifling the global innovation that AI promises? Share your thoughts in the comments below or subscribe to our newsletter for more deep dives into the intersection of AI and geopolitics.
Explore more: The Future of Sovereign AI | Understanding Agentic Workflows
