Meta Platforms has acquired Singapore-based artificial intelligence (AI) startup Manus.
Murthy Grandhi, company profiles analyst at GlobalData, believes Meta is making one of its clearest wagers yet on autonomous AI.
“Agreeing to acquire Manus is a move that underscores how quickly the AI race is shifting from foundation models to deployable software agents that execute real work,” he says.
“The purchase gives Meta a functioning business with paying customers, meaningful revenue and infrastructure already proven at scale.
“Manus builds general-purpose AI agents that handle multi-step knowledge tasks such as research synthesis, analytics, automation workflows and coding, predominantly for enterprise subscribers.
“In less than a year from launch, the company is reported to have reached an annual revenue run rate of roughly $100-million to $125-million, driven largely by recurring subscriptions rather than pilots or free trials.
“Its platform has processed hundreds of trillions of tokens and orchestrated thousands of virtual machines to complete long-running jobs, an operational scale unusual in the still-nascent agent market.
“For Meta, the strategic logic is straightforward. The company has committed tens of billions of dollars to AI data centres and model development, but monetisation has lagged its infrastructure ambition,” Grandhi adds. “Manus offers a ready-made, high-margin software layer that can be sold directly and integrated across Meta’s consumer and enterprise products.
“Meta is expected to keep Manus as a standalone service while infusing its agent capabilities into Meta AI, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, creating both immediate revenue and longer-term platform leverage.
“According to regional reports, the deal runs into the billions of dollars, ranking among Meta’s largest acquisitions. Manus’s founder, Xiao Hong, will join Meta as a vice president, adding experienced leadership in building and scaling autonomous agent products at a time when Meta is reorganizing around AI initiatives.
“The acquisition intensifies competition with OpenAI and Google by moving the battleground from model benchmarks to agents that deliver measurable business outcomes. Enterprises are showing willingness to pay for systems that plan, execute and verify complex workflows with minimal supervision, a step change from static chatbots.
“It also highlights an emerging geographic reality: some of the most commercially advanced agentic platforms are being built outside Silicon Valley. Manus’s trajectory from Singapore to a global exit signal how rapidly Asian AI startups are scaling into strategic assets.
“The challenge now shifts to execution. Integrating autonomous agents safely and reliably across products used by billions will test Meta’s technical and regulatory finesse. If successful, the Manus deal could accelerate the mainstreaming of AI ‘digital employees,’ opening new revenue streams and reshaping how everyday software is used at work and at home.”