For this very reason!
THIS IS PURELY SPECULATIVE!
The founders of Manus AI could not compete in the shark-infested market—arguably the most competitive in the world: China. Manus wanted to differentiate itself from the competition, and the only realistic way to do so was outside China, due to existing regulations and pre-existing constraints (a.k.a. the CPC). I specifically said the CPC because Manus intended to differentiate by building a platform free from the traditional constraints inherent in China's ecosystem.
They saw the opportunity and jumped at the chance to set up shop in Singapore—a country deeply connected and integrated with all major Western financial hubs, as well as a key shipping and docking stop in Southeast Asia.
From there, the company worked hard to grow and take itself to new heights. They achieved this by constantly pushing product developments and introducing new features (even if those features didn't always work exactly as marketed or advertised). The important metric was to build enough hype—since hype is the currency most coveted and always in vogue with Western financial institutions, investors, and above all, U.S. tech giants like Meta.
We all know that among the Magnificent 7 companies (Meta, Alphabet, Apple, Tesla, Nvidia, etc.), Meta has been the weakest—or at least, that's the growing perception in both public and private spheres. Despite the company's massive hiring and spending binge, it has yet to produce an AI product on par with Anthropic's Claude Opus, ChatGPT, Google's Gemini/Nano, or even Elon Musk's Grok...
This latest announcement of Meta essentially acquiring Manus AI is their way of getting the market—and the so-called experts—to talk about Meta in a way that makes it seem less like an afterthought.