
SpaceX Acquires AI Coding Firm Cursor in $60bn All-Stock Deal Days After Record IPO
The acquisition of Anysphere, maker of the Cursor coding platform, underscores Elon Musk’s ambition to dominate artificial intelligence following SpaceX’s historic Nasdaq debut.
SpaceX has agreed to acquire Anysphere, the San Francisco-based developer of the AI-powered coding assistant Cursor, in an all-stock transaction valued at $60 billion (£44.7 billion). The deal, expected to close in the third quarter, comes just days after the aerospace and technology group completed the largest initial public offering in history on New York’s Nasdaq exchange, a listing that raised $85.7 billion and briefly propelled the company’s market capitalisation past $2 trillion. SpaceX shares surged more than 40 per cent in their first two trading sessions, lifting the firm into the ranks of the world’s five most valuable companies and providing the currency needed to finalise a takeover that had been under discussion for months. Under a prior agreement, Musk’s rocket maker had the option to either purchase Cursor outright or pay $10 billion for the work already undertaken together; the swift decision to proceed with the full acquisition signals a clear strategic imperative.
Viewed from Silicon Valley, the transaction represents a staggering windfall for Cursor’s youthful founders and their venture capital backers. The four MIT-educated cofounders—Michael Truell, Aman Sanger, Sualeh Asif, and Arvid Lunnemark, all aged 25 or 26—will each see their net worths double to an estimated $2.7 billion, according to Forbes. Early investors are also poised for outsized returns: Andreessen Horowitz’s roughly 10 per cent stake is now worth $6 billion, while Thrive’s 7 per cent holding has swelled to $4.2 billion. The deal underscores the frothy valuations commanded by generative AI start-ups, particularly those operating at the intersection of developer tools and large language models, a sector that has drawn intense interest from venture capital on both sides of the Atlantic.
Analysts in London and Berlin note that the acquisition fits a broader pattern of Musk consolidating AI capabilities across his business empire. Cursor’s platform, which automates code generation and debugging, is already used by developers worldwide and competes with offerings from OpenAI and Anthropic. By absorbing the start-up into SpaceX, Musk gains a ready-made AI coding agent that could accelerate software development for his aerospace ventures while feeding into the ambitions of xAI, his standalone artificial intelligence company. Argentine observers point out that the deal, coming so soon after SpaceX’s blockbuster market debut, leaves little doubt about Musk’s determination to challenge the dominance of OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Anthropic’s Claude in the commercial AI arena.
From Moscow to Accra, the transaction is being read as a signal that SpaceX is evolving far beyond its origins as a rocket manufacturer. The all-stock structure conserves cash but ties Cursor’s future to the volatile trajectory of SpaceX shares, which remain tightly coupled to Musk’s personal brand and the unpredictable rhythms of spaceflight milestones. Regulatory scrutiny may yet emerge, particularly in Washington, where lawmakers have expressed concern about the concentration of power in Musk’s hands across sectors ranging from satellite internet to social media and artificial intelligence. As the third-quarter closing deadline approaches, the integration of Cursor’s team and technology will be closely watched, as will the response from rival AI labs that now face a competitor backed by the financial muscle of a $2 trillion public company.
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After its record IPO and surging share price, SpaceX agreed to acquire AI coding startup Cursor for $60 billion in an all-stock deal, expected to close in the third quarter. The move cements Elon Musk's company among the world's top five by market cap, as Musk's personal fortune hits $1.4 trillion.
Without pausing after the largest IPO in history, SpaceX needed just two trading sessions to move on its $60 billion purchase of Cursor, aiming to compete with OpenAI and Anthropic. Shares surged over 40%, enabling the lightning-fast all-stock acquisition.
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