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Beijing Says It Never Told AI Firms to Reject U.S. Money. Does That Settle It?

Anderson Liam
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On Friday morning in Beijing, NDRC spokesperson Li Chao stood at a press briefing and delivered a denial that had been building for weeks. China’s National Development and Reform Commission, the country’s most powerful economic planning body, has never required domestic technology companies to reject foreign investment, he said. The statement addressed a direct question about whether Beijing plans to instruct Chinese firms to refuse U.S. capital – a question that gained traction after sources familiar with the matter described regulators ordering several private AI startups, including top artificial intelligence companies, to turn away American funding in new rounds unless explicitly approved by the government.

Daniel Wu, who tracks geopolitics and energy, places this in a longer sequence: “China’s regulators have used informal guidance as a policy tool since at least the late 2000s. The instruction, if it was issued, would never appear in a public document. What matters is the behavior that follows: did those AI firms actually reject U.S. term sheets? That question has a cleaner empirical answer than any press briefing.” The NDRC denial lands against a backdrop that sharpens its edges considerably, and that context is precisely what NewsTrackerToday traced: one month ago, Beijing ordered Meta to unwind its acquisition of Chinese AI startup Manus. That decision rattled the foreign business community more than any informal guidance memo could have.

The Manus case remains the clearest reference point. The company operates in AI reasoning and agentic systems, a sector Beijing treats as national security infrastructure. When Meta moved to formalize a transaction, regulators intervened and reversed it. Li Chao added a qualifier on Friday that headline coverage mostly omitted: foreign investment must comply with Chinese laws and regulations, and must not harm China’s national security or interests. That clause is doing significant work. A blanket denial and a national-security carve-out issued in the same sentence are not the same as a clean all-clear.

Chinese AI startups need capital to compete at the frontier. Domestic funding pools are substantial but not unlimited, and for certain compute-intensive applications, U.S. venture capital carries both financial weight and technical credibility. At the same time, Beijing’s Cybersecurity Law Amendment – effective January 1, 2026 – broadened obligations for network operators and tightened cross-border data transfer requirements. The regulatory perimeter around sensitive AI systems is now more explicitly drawn than at any prior point, and that is the structural tension NewsTrackerToday reads into the NDRC statement: the denial addresses the rhetoric; the law addresses the architecture.

Ethan Cole, who focuses on macroeconomics and central banks, strips the signal down: “Denial. Investment compliance caveat. That sequence is designed to calm foreign business sentiment without conceding any actual policy ground. Classic. The real question is whether U.S. limited partners are willing to put money into Chinese AI vehicles when the exit path is uncertain and the regulatory environment can shift on informal instruction. Risk premium on that category is repricing upward regardless of what any spokesperson says.” What NewsTrackerToday spotlights in Cole’s read is the gap between the regulatory message and the actual risk-pricing behavior it is meant to influence.

But the mechanism of the original claim deserves its own scrutiny. According to sources familiar with the matter, regulators instructed firms to reject investment ‘unless explicitly approved.’ That conditional transforms a categorical prohibition into a selective vetting system. The NDRC did not specifically address whether an approval-based process exists. Its denial covered only the claim that firms were told to reject investment outright. Those are distinguishable positions, and the distinction matters for any U.S. fund manager with an active term sheet.

So where does this leave foreign investors with positions in Chinese AI startups, or with open conversations in progress? The NDRC denial changes the rhetorical environment and little else, News Tracker Today notes. Regulatory risk in the Chinese tech sector now prices differently than it did before the Manus reversal. Beijing wants foreign capital and wants sovereign control over its AI sector. Both remain true simultaneously, and no Friday briefing resolves that contradiction.

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