Marketdash

Meta Scoops Up Chinese AI Startup Manus to Build Army of Digital Workers

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
Meta is buying Manus AI, a Chinese startup that builds autonomous digital agents designed to work like AI employees. The move follows Meta's massive Scale AI investment and intensifies competition with OpenAI in the race to create AI that can actually do things, not just chat.

Meta Platforms Inc. (META) is making another big bet on AI, and this time it's not about better chatbots. The company just acquired Manus AI, a fast-rising Chinese startup that builds autonomous agents designed to function like digital employees.

What Makes Manus Different

Think of Manus as AI that doesn't just answer questions but actually gets work done. The startup develops general-purpose AI agents capable of handling research, automation, and multi-step tasks without needing constant hand-holding. Instead of asking your AI assistant what the weather is, imagine it booking your flight, researching your destination, and creating an itinerary without you lifting a finger.

On Monday, Meta announced plans to operate and commercialize the Manus service, integrating the technology into Meta AI and other products. The company didn't disclose how much it paid for the startup.

Building on the Scale AI Megadeal

The Manus acquisition follows Meta's aggressive AI moves earlier this year. The social media giant invested in Scale AI in a deal that valued the data-labeling firm at $29 billion and acquired a 49% stake. Alexandr Wang, founder of Scale AI and now Meta's chief AI officer, confirmed the Manus deal on X.

The strategy is clear: Meta is racing to build AI that can operate autonomously, moving beyond conversational assistants into territory where AI agents can complete complex tasks independently.

Taking Aim at OpenAI

Earlier this year, Manus launched its AI agent and made bold claims about outperforming OpenAI's DeepResearch tool. The startup, which operates under Beijing Butterfly Effect Technology Ltd., gained attention by completing dozens of real-world tasks for users on X at no cost, essentially running a public demonstration of what its technology could do.

In May 2025, Manus AI raised $75 million in a funding round led by Benchmark, with participation from Tencent Holdings (TCEHY), ZhenFund, and HongShan Capital. That funding round valued the young company highly enough that Meta apparently decided buying was better than competing.

Market Reaction

Meta shares were down 0.69% during regular trading hours on Monday and slipped another 0.27% in after-hours trading. The stock faces a bearish outlook over the medium and long term, despite maintaining a positive price trend in the short term.

The acquisition represents Meta's latest attempt to stay competitive in the rapidly evolving AI landscape, where the race has shifted from who can build the best chatbot to who can build AI that actually works autonomously. With OpenAI, Google, and others pursuing similar agent-based technologies, Meta is clearly betting that Manus gives it an edge in creating AI that can think and act independently.

Meta Scoops Up Chinese AI Startup Manus to Build Army of Digital Workers

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 hours ago
Meta is buying Manus AI, a Chinese startup that builds autonomous digital agents designed to work like AI employees. The move follows Meta's massive Scale AI investment and intensifies competition with OpenAI in the race to create AI that can actually do things, not just chat.

Meta Platforms Inc. (META) is making another big bet on AI, and this time it's not about better chatbots. The company just acquired Manus AI, a fast-rising Chinese startup that builds autonomous agents designed to function like digital employees.

What Makes Manus Different

Think of Manus as AI that doesn't just answer questions but actually gets work done. The startup develops general-purpose AI agents capable of handling research, automation, and multi-step tasks without needing constant hand-holding. Instead of asking your AI assistant what the weather is, imagine it booking your flight, researching your destination, and creating an itinerary without you lifting a finger.

On Monday, Meta announced plans to operate and commercialize the Manus service, integrating the technology into Meta AI and other products. The company didn't disclose how much it paid for the startup.

Building on the Scale AI Megadeal

The Manus acquisition follows Meta's aggressive AI moves earlier this year. The social media giant invested in Scale AI in a deal that valued the data-labeling firm at $29 billion and acquired a 49% stake. Alexandr Wang, founder of Scale AI and now Meta's chief AI officer, confirmed the Manus deal on X.

The strategy is clear: Meta is racing to build AI that can operate autonomously, moving beyond conversational assistants into territory where AI agents can complete complex tasks independently.

Taking Aim at OpenAI

Earlier this year, Manus launched its AI agent and made bold claims about outperforming OpenAI's DeepResearch tool. The startup, which operates under Beijing Butterfly Effect Technology Ltd., gained attention by completing dozens of real-world tasks for users on X at no cost, essentially running a public demonstration of what its technology could do.

In May 2025, Manus AI raised $75 million in a funding round led by Benchmark, with participation from Tencent Holdings (TCEHY), ZhenFund, and HongShan Capital. That funding round valued the young company highly enough that Meta apparently decided buying was better than competing.

Market Reaction

Meta shares were down 0.69% during regular trading hours on Monday and slipped another 0.27% in after-hours trading. The stock faces a bearish outlook over the medium and long term, despite maintaining a positive price trend in the short term.

The acquisition represents Meta's latest attempt to stay competitive in the rapidly evolving AI landscape, where the race has shifted from who can build the best chatbot to who can build AI that actually works autonomously. With OpenAI, Google, and others pursuing similar agent-based technologies, Meta is clearly betting that Manus gives it an edge in creating AI that can think and act independently.