Did Elon Musk acquire AI startup Cursor with a $60 billion premium? Strategic planning ahead of SpaceX’s IPO

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SpaceX recently announced a major agreement with AI programming startup Cursor, planning to acquire the company for $60 billion or pay $10 billion to establish a deep collaboration. The move comes as SpaceX merges with xAI, Musk’s company, and prepares for its first public offering (IPO), highlighting the group’s strategic play in the AI space. It is also reported that Cursor was previously seeking to raise $2 billion at a valuation of more than $50 billion, attracting attention from relevant tech giants.

SpaceX announces a major agreement with Cursor

SpaceX announced that it is working closely with SpaceXAI and the AI programming startup Cursor, with the goal of building the world’s top artificial intelligence for programming and knowledge work. Cursor’s leading products and its distribution channels focused on professional software engineers, combined with SpaceX’s million-scale H100 equivalent Colossus training supercomputer, will enable it to build the most practical models in the world.

Cursor also granted SpaceX a right that allows SpaceX to acquire Cursor later this year for $60 billion, or to acquire the collaboration results of both parties for $10 billion.

Is SpaceX’s $60 billion acquisition premium for Cursor ahead of its IPO?

According to Bloomberg, Cursor had previously been in talks with investors, planning to raise about $2 billion through a funding round to push the company’s valuation above $50 billion. Nvidia and Andreessen Horowitz both plan to participate in this transaction.

SpaceX’s offer reflects its willingness to make a premium acquisition of AI companies with a massive user base. This move not only closes the technical gap between xAI in code generation tools, but also gives Cursor substantial computing power, creating a complementary relationship between technology and hardware resources.

SpaceX is preparing its first public offering (IPO), and it has recently also completed a merger with xAI. By incorporating Cursor into its business lineup, SpaceX can show the capital markets its software development capabilities beyond aerospace hardware. Large-scale M&A like this helps expand a company’s market valuation base and indicates that well-funded enterprises tend to shorten development cycles by pursuing direct acquisitions.

Competitive landscape in the AI industry and potential impact

Competition in the AI programming market continues to intensify. Cursor’s product can effectively improve software developers’ code-writing efficiency and has become an important benchmark in the field. SpaceX’s infusion of resources will change the existing market ecosystem, putting pressure on companies like OpenAI and Anthropic that also develop automated programming tools. For the broader industry, the concentration of capital and compute will widen the technical gap between leaders and latecomers.

This article Is Musk acquiring AI startup Cursor for a $60 billion premium? Strategic layout before SpaceX’s IPO was first published on Chain News ABMedia.

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