News linked to both this project and an event.
According to PR Newswire, MoonPay has officially launched MoonPay Headless Onramps—the industry’s first native crypto checkout platform enabling one-click crypto purchases via Apple Pay, credit cards, and Google Pay across the U.S., the European Economic Area, and over 100 countries worldwide. In contrast, competing headless payment solutions currently support mobile payments only within the U.S. This product replaces MoonPay’s branded widget with a pure API integration, enabling partners to deliver a fully white-labeled and highly customizable checkout experience—while MoonPay handles payment processing, compliance, and identity verification in the background. Launch partners include Moonshot, Bitcoin.com, Bread, and Trust Wallet. Notably, Apple Pay is now fully embedded into partner apps for the first time: verified users can complete purchases with a single tap—no redirects or re-verification required.
The immediate trigger for this regulatory tightening was Meta’s $2 billion acquisition of Manus—a China-founded AI agent company—after which relevant authorities ordered the deal’s reversal and launched a systematic review of the “domestically operated, offshore-registered” corporate model. Dismantling a red-chip structure is procedurally complex, typically taking six months to one year and involving multiple steps—including repurchasing offshore equity, establishing a joint venture, and having investors re-invest. Moreover, shares of such joint ventures listed in Hong Kong are subject to a 12-month lock-up period—twice as long as that for ordinary red-chip stocks. Analysts note that if red-chip structures face comprehensive restrictions, Chinese startups’ ability to raise U.S. dollar funding from overseas will be significantly weakened.
: Following the halt of the acquisition plan for AI agent company Manus, the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC) has tightened its review of red-chip structure enterprises seeking Hong Kong IPOs. Several AI companies planning to go public have begun evaluating the dismantling of their overseas structures and a return to domestic entities. Moonshot AI is currently in communication with lawyers regarding structural reorganization, but has not yet made a final decision. Stepfun has already initiated the process of dismantling its overseas holding structure, believing that transitioning to a domestic entity will help shorten the approval cycle. DeepRoute.ai is also conducting a similar evaluation. Industry insiders point out that dismantling a red-chip structure typically takes 6 to 12 months, involving processes such as equity buybacks, establishing joint venture entities, and tax handling. Currently, regulators have not issued a comprehensive ban, but have been inquiring about the overseas holding situations of relevant companies. (The Information)