Four days after completing the largest IPO in history, SpaceX is already making its first major move as a public company — and it has nothing to do with rockets. SpaceX (Nasdaq: SPCX) confirmed in an SEC filing Tuesday that it will acquire Anysphere, the company behind the popular AI coding tool Cursor, in an all-stock transaction valued at $60 billion. The deal is expected to close in the third quarter of 2026, pending regulatory approvals, and would make Cursor a wholly owned SpaceX subsidiary.
SpaceX shares jumped more than 12% on the news, trading above $216 and poised for a third consecutive day of gains since its June 12 debut. The move pushes SpaceX’s market capitalization toward $2.5 trillion, ranking it among the most valuable publicly traded companies in the world.
The Deal Was Months in the Making
This acquisition did not come out of nowhere. In April, SpaceX announced a strategic partnership with Anysphere focused on AI for coding and knowledge work. That original agreement included a provision giving SpaceX the option to either pay $10 billion for the collaborative work the two companies had performed together, or acquire Anysphere outright for $60 billion later in the year. SpaceX has elected to pursue full ownership.
The financial logic behind that decision is reflected in Cursor’s growth. The AI coding platform, founded in 2022, has scaled at an extraordinary pace, reaching approximately $4 billion in annualized recurring revenue as of this month — up from figures that were a fraction of that just a year ago. Cursor has built a large and rapidly expanding base of software developers who use its AI agent to automate and accelerate the coding process.
Why SpaceX Wants an AI Coding Company
On the surface, a rocket and satellite company acquiring an AI coding platform appears unusual. The strategic rationale becomes clearer in the context of SpaceX’s February merger with Elon Musk’s AI venture xAI. That combination established SpaceX as an entity spanning launch, satellite connectivity, and artificial intelligence under one roof. The Cursor acquisition deepens the AI dimension significantly.
SpaceX has struggled to keep pace with AI coding leaders Anthropic and OpenAI, both of which have built dominant positions in the agentic coding space. Acquiring Cursor gives SpaceX immediate scale and a proven product in one of the fastest-growing segments of the AI market, rather than attempting to build a competing capability from scratch. Musk indicated over the weekend that SpaceX could potentially reach approximately $1 trillion in annual revenue by 2030 — a target that requires growth engines well beyond launch and satellite internet.
The Read-Through for Smaller AI Companies
For investors tracking the AI software space, the Cursor acquisition carries a specific signal. A $60 billion valuation for a company that was generating a fraction of that in revenue just a year ago reflects the premium that strategic acquirers are willing to pay for proven, rapidly scaling AI products with large user bases and strong enterprise traction.
The agentic coding segment in particular has emerged as one of the most commercially validated corners of the AI economy. Smaller companies building specialized AI development tools, code automation platforms, and enterprise AI workflow products now operate in a market where the largest and best-capitalized players are paying tens of billions to establish positions. That dynamic tends to lift valuations and acquisition interest across the entire segment.
SpaceX went public as a space company. Four days later, it is reshaping itself into an AI contender. The pace alone tells you how fast this market is moving.