How SpaceX preempted a $2B fundraise with a $60B buyout offer
The round would have valued the company at $50 billion.
SpaceX said it would either buy the company at some point later this year or pay $10 billion to Cursor to collaborate on AI development.
SpaceX, which recently merged with xAI, has been aiming to beef up its AI capabilities to better compete with leaders like Anthropic and OpenAI. Acquiring Cursor gives Elon Musk’s company a better chance of challenging rivals in AI coding, currently the most lucrative application of the technology.
However, SpaceX is delaying the potential acquisition of Cursor until after its IPO this summer.
This is largely because the company wants to avoid updating its confidential financial filings before the listing, and it will be easier to finance the $60 billion purchase using its new, publicly traded stock.
The deal appears to benefit both sides for several reasons.
Despite fast revenue growth, Cursor is facing fierce competition from Anthropic’s Claude Code and OpenAI’s Codex. Given that threat, the startup could face challenges in continuing to raise private capital to finance its massive computing needs.
The company would also like public investors to value it as more than just a space and satellite business. By promising to potentially acquire Cursor, SpaceX positions itself as an AI company, giving it a chance to garner the much higher valuation multiple that Wall Street currently assigns to AI companies
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: