According to Beating, China’s National Development and Reform Commission halted Meta’s $2 billion acquisition of AI agent company Manus, prompting the China Securities Regulatory Commission to tighten approval for Hong Kong IPO listings by red-chip companies (Chinese firms holding domestic assets through overseas entities registered in jurisdictions like the Cayman Islands). Multiple Chinese AI companies planning Hong Kong listings are now evaluating dismantling their overseas structures and relocating to domestic entities.
Mooncake (developer of the Kimi model series) is discussing structural reorganization with legal advisors and has not yet decided; the company is nearing completion of a funding round valuing it at $18 billion. Step Robotics (Stepwise Star) has already begun dismantling its overseas holding structure earlier this year, believing conversion to a domestic entity will shorten Hong Kong IPO approval timelines. Autonomous driving company DeepRoute.ai is undertaking similar discussions. Dismantling red-chip structures typically requires 6 to 12 months and involves repurchasing all investor shares in overseas entities, establishing domestic joint ventures, and reselling shares under new terms.