Cursor CEO Michael Truell on April 07, 2026 in San Francisco, California. Big Event Media/Getty Images/HumanXOK, so here’s a wild one: Elon Musk’s rocket company SpaceX
said Tuesday that it
might acquire the hot AI startup Cursor for $60 billion.
Might! What a world.
The actual deal is a $10 billion collaboration to develop “
coding and knowledge work” artificial intelligence, pairing Cursor’s AI expertise with SpaceX’s Colossus supercomputer.
But if all goes well, SpaceX retains the right to acquire Cursor “later this year for $60 billion.” No pressure, Cursor CEO Michael Truell!
Cursor’s ascendance has been swift, with
a big splashy feature in Fortune magazine and an almost $30 billion valuation at the end of last year. The San Francisco company has reportedly been in talks to raise $2 billion at a valuation of $50 billion; with that kind of trajectory, SpaceX was wise to strike a deal now.
Still, there was an air of inevitability to SpaceX—which acquired xAI in February—taking Cursor off the table.
As
Fortune’s Allie Garfinkle wrote last month: “Investors disagree about Cursor’s likely fate. Some say the only natural end point is an IPO, which would require the company to get its unit economics majorly in order. Others say it could be a mega-acquisition from OpenAI, which reportedly looked into acquiring Cursor early last year.”
Surely Elon would never let that happen, eh?
—AN