In a major escalation of the technological “decoupling” between the world’s two largest economies, the Chinese government has begun implementing sweeping restrictions on U.S. capital flowing into its most sensitive technology sectors. According to reports surfaced on April 24, 2026, Chinese regulators led by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) have instructed top-tier private technology firms and AI pioneers to reject U.S. investment in upcoming funding rounds unless explicitly authorized by Beijing. This move marks a definitive end to the era of unrestricted Western venture capital fueling China’s “Silicon Valley.”
The catalyst for this sudden tightening appears to be Meta’s high-profile, $2 billion acquisition of the Chinese AI startup Manus in 2025. That transaction sent shockwaves through Beijing’s halls of power, sparking fears that China’s most promising intellectual property was being siphoned off to U.S. “Big Tech” before it could be fully integrated into the domestic economy.
The NDRC’s new guidance is designed to prevent a repeat of the Manus deal. By requiring government approval for U.S. capital, China is essentially asserting “veto power” over the cap tables of its startups. The goal is to ensure that “national core technologies” particularly in generative AI and semiconductors remain under domestic control and are not used to bolster the AI capabilities of American rivals.
High-Profile Targets: Moonshot AI, StepFun, and ByteDance
The initial wave of restrictions has targeted the “crown jewels” of China’s current AI boom. Startups such as Moonshot AI and StepFun, which have emerged as leading challengers to OpenAI and Anthropic, have reportedly been instructed to pivot away from U.S.-based venture firms.
Furthermore, the mandate extends to established giants. ByteDance, the parent company of TikTok, has been specifically warned against allowing secondary share sales to U.S. investors without explicit clearance. This is a significant blow to U.S. institutional investors, such as pension funds and endowments, which have long viewed ByteDance as one of the most lucrative private assets in the world. For ByteDance, this adds another layer of complexity to its already fraught relationship with both the U.S. and Chinese governments.
The Role of the NDRC as a Financial Gatekeeper
The involvement of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) signals that this is not just a regulatory hurdle, but a matter of national economic planning. The NDRC is tasked with ensuring that private sector growth aligns with China’s long-term “AI Plus” mandate, a state project to embed AI into every corner of the manufacturing and healthcare sectors.
By acting as a financial gatekeeper, the NDRC is forcing Chinese startups to seek “cleaner” capital from domestic state-backed funds or investors from “friendly” regions like the Middle East. This strategic realignment aims to break the “dependency loop” where Chinese innovation is funded by the very U.S. capital that the Washington government is simultaneously trying to restrict through its own export controls.
A Counter to Washington’s “Reverse CFIUS”
China’s move is widely seen as a symmetrical response to the United States’ own “Reverse CFIUS” (Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States) rules. Earlier in 2026, the U.S. Treasury Department finalized restrictions that limited American investment in Chinese quantum computing, semiconductors, and AI, citing national security risks.
With Beijing now implementing its own mirrors of these restrictions, the “digital iron curtain” is effectively complete. The flow of both technology and the money that builds it is being bifurcated. For global venture firms like Sequoia and Benchmark, which have historically bridged the gap between the two ecosystems, the path forward is becoming increasingly narrow, often requiring them to completely split their Chinese and American operations.
The Impact on the Global Venture Ecosystem
The “de-Americanization” of Chinese tech funding will have profound ripple effects. For decades, U.S. capital didn’t just bring money; it brought Western management styles, global network effects, and a path to IPOs on the New York Stock Exchange. Without this pipeline, Chinese startups may face:
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Lower Valuations: Domestic capital is often more conservative and less abundant than the global pools managed by U.S. firms.
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IPO Shifts: We are likely to see a permanent shift away from NASDAQ/NYSE listings toward the Hong Kong and Shanghai (STAR Market) exchanges.
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State Influence: As private U.S. capital exits, state-backed “Guidance Funds” will fill the void, potentially leading to more government influence over corporate direction.
As of late April 2026, the message from Beijing is clear: technology is a weapon of statecraft, not just a commodity. By curbing U.S. investment, China is doubling down on its quest for total technological self-reliance. While this may slow the immediate growth of some startups due to reduced liquidity, the Chinese government is betting that “sovereign capital” will ultimately produce a more resilient and aligned tech sector.
The era of the “global startup” is fading, replaced by a world where your funding source defines your geopolitical allegiance. As the NDRC tightens its grip, the “digital arteries” connecting the U.S. and Chinese tech sectors are being severed, one funding round at a time.




