- SpaceX acquired Cursor — an AI coding agent used by Nvidia, British Airways, and Deloitte — for $60 billion in an all-stock deal, more than double Cursor’s $29.3 billion November valuation; Cursor’s annualized revenue hit $4 billion in early June, up from $100 million in 2024.
- Musk publicly ranked the AI landscape: Anthropic #1, OpenAI #2, Google #3, Chinese open-source #4, xAI #5 — placing his own AI company last, making the Cursor deal an acknowledgment of how far SpaceX must travel to close the gap.
- SpaceX is renting data-center capacity to rivals including Anthropic and Google, with announced deals projected to generate $26 billion per year from 2027 to 2029 — turning a compute deficit into a revenue stream.
- xAI lost $6.4 billion on $3.2 billion in revenue in 2025 and $2.5 billion on $818 million in Q1 2026; some IPO proceeds are already committed to $20 billion in debt repayment and a $55 billion+ chip-fabrication facility in Texas.
What Happened?
SpaceX announced a $60 billion all-stock acquisition of Cursor, the San Francisco AI coding agent whose tools are used by major AI labs and enterprise clients including Nvidia, British Airways, and Deloitte. Cursor’s annualized revenue surged from $100 million in early 2025 to $1 billion by year-end, and then to $4 billion by early June 2026. The deal follows SpaceX’s earlier acquisition of Musk-controlled xAI, which brought the Grok chatbot, X, and large data centers into the fold. SpaceX has also begun renting out its computing capacity to rivals: deals with Anthropic and Google to use the Colossus supercomputer cluster could generate $26 billion annually from 2027 to 2029. Cursor CEO Michael Truell, a rising talent in AI, will join SpaceX and the company says it will continue partnering with other AI model providers.
Why It Matters?
Musk used his own courtroom testimony to lay out the strategic problem: he ranked xAI fifth in the AI landscape — behind Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, and Chinese open-source models. SpaceX’s $86 billion IPO war chest is substantial, but the spending queue is long: $20 billion in debt repayment, a $55 billion chip fab in Texas, and Starlink spectrum purchases all have claims on the proceeds. Meanwhile, xAI is burning cash at a steep rate. Cursor gives SpaceX a proven enterprise AI revenue stream with existing customers that doesn’t require winning the frontier model race. The data-center rental strategy is an equally elegant parallel move — charging Anthropic and Google to use SpaceX’s own compute while building capability.
What’s Next?
The key integration question is whether SpaceX will lock Cursor users into Grok or preserve the multi-model flexibility that drove the product’s growth. Truell has signaled Cursor will continue partnering with other AI providers, suggesting SpaceX is betting on distribution and enterprise relationships over model exclusivity. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley both project SpaceX revenue approaching $160 billion by 2028 — eight times 2025 levels — with AI products driving most of that growth. Executing on that projection while closing the AI capability gap with Anthropic and OpenAI will define whether SpaceX’s post-IPO chapter delivers on its astronomical valuation.
Source: The Wall Street Journal











