Cursor co-founder and CEO Michael Truell speaking at Fortune Brainstorm AI 2025 in San Francisco, California.Stuart Isett/FortuneJust as the prophecy foretold—or maybe just as the paperwork disclosed—SpaceX will officially,
finally, buy Anysphere, the parent company of the AI coding agent Cursor, for $60 billion in stock.
The deal comes mere days after SpaceX’s market debut at $135 per share; it’s now trading at more than $200 per share, valuing the company at $2.64 trillion and placing it among the five most valuable American corporations.
The goal, as it was when the companies
tentatively agreed to merge in late April, was to give SpaceX (which, since February, is the combined SpaceX and xAI) a robust coding agent to compete with rivals Anthropic (and its Claude Code), OpenAI (Codex), Microsoft (Github Copilot), and Google (Jules).
“For the past few months, SpaceXAI has been jointly training a model with Cursor, which will be released in Cursor and Grok Build soon,” SpaceX said
in a statement. "We look forward to working closely with the Cursor team to advance our frontier AI capabilities.”
Celebrating back at Cursor HQ in San Francisco is CEO Michael Truell and his cofounders Sualeh Asif, Arvid Lunnemark, and Aman Sanger; all retained individual 4.5% stakes in the company, making them each paper multibillionaires in their mid-20s.
At Fortune’s Brainstorm AI gathering late last year, Truell told the audience that the company is well-positioned to influence enterprise AI adoption more broadly.
"Some of what's working in our space, in the AI coding space, I think will start to work for other areas of knowledge work,” he said. “And that's in particular being able to delegate full tasks to the AI and having the AI really be able to work with the same tools that humans can work with and not just go and gather information, but then also make changes and actually take action for you."
—AN