SpaceX Bets on Cursor AI Used by 67% of Fortune 500.
SpaceX, the rocket company that now owns xAI and the Colossus supercomputer, has struck a deal giving it the option to acquire AI coding startup Cursor for $60 billion. The actual structure is a $10 billion collaboration to develop “coding and knowledge work” AI, pairing Cursor’s expertise with SpaceX’s Colossus infrastructure, with the right to acquire Cursor outright later this year according to the Guardian.
The internet immediately erupted in two camps: believers calling it a genius power move and skeptics questioning whether any code editor is worth the GDP of a small nation.
Both camps are missing the real story.
Cursor’s Numbers Stunned SpaceX
Cursor, built by Anysphere, was founded in 2022 by four MIT students and has grown at a pace that has become a benchmark for AI-era startups.
It was valued at $400 million in a Series A in mid-2024, climbed to $2.5 billion by January 2025, and closed a $2.3 billion Series D in November 2025 at $29.3 billion per Cursor. The company surpassed $1 billion in annualized recurring revenue with year-over-year growth exceeding 9,900%, and more than one million developers use the platform daily.
That is what legitimate product-market fit looks like when compute meets demand at exactly the right moment.
Cursor CEO Michael Truell confirmed he is focused on scaling the company’s proprietary Composer model, and Colossus gives Anysphere training infrastructure it could never replicate independently.
The Strategic Gap SpaceX Is Filling
Here is the fact most coverage glosses over.
While OpenAI’s Codex has reached three million weekly users and Anthropic’s Claude Code has become the most-used AI coding tool among professional engineers, xAI has no comparable product.
SpaceX absorbed xAI in an all-stock deal in February 2026, inheriting a supercomputer in Memphis with no killer app to run through it.
The Cursor partnership provides that application.
SpaceX’s Real Play Is a Three-Part Bet.
The $60 billion figure grabs headlines, but the actual logic is more surgical. SpaceX is making three simultaneous bets with one transaction.
First, compute without a killer app is just expensive real estate. Colossus, with the equivalent of one million Nvidia H100 GPUs, needs a world-class product routing traffic through it. Cursor, with over one million daily active developers and 150 million lines of enterprise code generated per day, is exactly that product.
Second, distribution is the moat that actually holds. Cursor has achieved something remarkably hard: habitual daily use by elite engineers inside 67% of Fortune 500 companies. That kind of embedded workflow loyalty does not appear overnight and cannot be replicated by throwing compute at the problem. OpenAI and Anthropic are both chasing it. SpaceX just optioned it.
Third, the people inside Anysphere are the asset no supercomputer can replicate. Four MIT co-founders who built the fastest B2B company to scale from zero to $2 billion in roughly three years did not do it by accident. They did it by understanding developer psychology at a depth that product managers at Big Tech consistently miss. The humans who understand what elite engineers actually need are the irreplaceable variable in this deal.
SpaceX’s IPO Is the Hidden Variable
SpaceX is preparing for what analysts expect could be one of the largest initial public offerings in history, with a potential listing as early as June 2026. A $60 billion AI coding asset on the balance sheet is extraordinary narrative fuel for that roadshow.
Consider this factoid: SpaceX absorbed xAI in February 2026 in an all-stock transaction valuing the combined entity at approximately $1.25 trillion, making the $60 billion Cursor option less than 5% of that combined valuation.
For a company of that scale, optioning the world’s fastest-growing developer platform is a calculated asymmetric bet. Musk has made this move before: acquire the distribution, control the compute, and let the IPO narrative do the rest.
And the compute ambitions do not stop at Memphis. SpaceX is already planning to expand Colossus into orbital data centers, meaning the same infrastructure training Cursor’s models today could literally be running in space tomorrow.
For SpaceX, the final frontier was never just space. It was always compute, capital, and control of the platforms that engineers live in every day.
The real question is whether SpaceX can turn the world’s best developer tool into the world’s best developer platform before OpenAI, Anthropic, or Google gets there first.
For the industry, SpaceX just made that race considerably more interesting.











