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SpaceX Plans to Acquire Cursor for $60 Billion. AI Programming Tool Cursor's Annualized Revenue Reaches $4 Billion. Will SpaceX Stock Rise?

TradingKeyJun 16, 2026 11:04 AM

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SpaceX plans to acquire AI coding tool developer Anysphere (Cursor) for $60 billion, with the merger expected by Q3 2026. Cursor’s annualized recurring revenue surpassed $4 billion as of early June, driven by strong enterprise adoption and its AI-native editor. By integrating Cursor, SpaceX aims to accelerate its "Macrohard" autonomous platform, utilizing internal computing power to optimize costs and transition from a aerospace firm into an AI-integrated powerhouse. The deal offers significant strategic value, potentially boosting profitability and bolstering SpaceX’s infrastructure for future space data center operations while enhancing its overall valuation narrative.

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TradingKey - Latest reports show that SpaceX will acquire Anysphere, the developer of the AI programming tool Cursor, for $60 billion, with the merger expected to close in the third quarter of 2026. Previously, SpaceX planned to move forward with the acquisition of Cursor within 30 days of its IPO. Under their agreement, SpaceX has the right to acquire the latter for $60 billion, or pay $10 billion under partnership terms.

According to Forbes, the AI startup Cursor, which Elon Musk's SpaceX plans to acquire, has seen its latest annualized recurring revenue (ARR) surpass the $4 billion mark. Will this acquisition drive up SpaceX's stock price? What makes Cursor unique compared to its competitors? Will SpaceX move one step closer to its goal of building a space data center?

Cursor’s Revenue Growth Surges, Crossing the 4 Billion Milestone

According to the latest reports, Cursor reached $4 billion in annualized revenue in early June. Bloomberg reported that the company's annualized revenue had reached $3 billion in late April this year, $2 billion in February, and $1 billion in November last year, highlighting its staggering pace of growth. Forbes, citing people familiar with the matter, reported that the revenue growth was partly driven by Cursor's launch of an agent tool called "Cloud Agents" in February.

In terms of revenue structure, the increase in Cursor's revenue was primarily driven by the growth of enterprise customers. The company stated in late May that 75% of its total annualized revenue comes from enterprise customers. Furthermore, the growth of its enterprise business in the first quarter was three times that of the fourth quarter of 2025.

Cursor vs. Anthropic: In a Crowded Field of AI Coding Tools, What is the Core Advantage?

Cursor is an AI unicorn founded in 2022 by four Gen Z founders. According to its latest funding round in mid-to-late April, its valuation has reached $50 billion. Despite this, the company still maintains a "small but beautiful" scale. According to LinkedIn data, its current headcount is only 201 to 500 people.

Yet, despite being such a small company, its product has prompted Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang to publicly state that Cursor is not only his favorite enterprise AI service, but also a tool used by Nvidia's own engineers, who have seen an amazing boost in productivity with its help.

According to Cursor's report, the AI programming tools represented by Cursor have profoundly changed the software engineering industry: the top 1% of developers using these tools write 46 times more lines of AI-generated code daily than the median active user. Yet among these tools, Cursor is in a league of its own. Data indicates that Cursor's AI-native code editor has already entered more than half of the Fortune 500 companies.

This can be seen from Cursor's valuation: its competitors GitHub and Atlassian (TEAM) , have market caps or acquisition valuations far below that of Cursor.

From a product perspective, in addition to the newly launched Cloud Agents, Cursor's flagship products include the AI-native code editor Cursor IDE and the code review and CI/CD tool Bugbot. Notably, Cursor once partnered very closely with Anthropic; the Cursor IDE relied on Anthropic's large models, contributing significant revenue to Anthropic through APIs. However, Anthropic's subsequent launch of Claude Code dealt a devastating blow to Cursor, forcing it to pivot to in-house research and development. It then launched Composer, a coding model built on Kimi, which has become the core of the Cursor IDE product line. Currently, its reputation among engineers is nearly on par with that of Claude Code.

The core advantages of Cursor and its products stem from their exceptional performance in specialized domains. Unlike Anthropic, which develops general-purpose multimodal models, Cursor focuses solely on AI coding tools, establishing its own moat in competition with similar products. Cursor features fully automated multi-file editing capabilities, enabling cross-file refactoring. It possesses a highly powerful global context awareness, supports hot-swapping between multiple models, and offers fast response times. Combined with the familiar environment of a traditional IDE editor, Cursor's product is currently the smoothest and most reliable productivity tool for human-AI pair programming on the market.

Will SpaceX's stock price surge after acquiring Cursor?

SpaceX could receive a direct upward catalyst from acquiring Cursor. The most straightforward reason is that Cursor's revenue growth is in its most rapid phase, with annualized revenue projected to potentially surpass $6 billion by the end of 2026. Given SpaceX's 2025 revenue of $18.7 billion, the acquisition of Cursor will contribute over a third of its annual revenue, while Cursor's valuation is less than 3% of SpaceX's implied IPO valuation—making this undoubtedly a highly cost-effective and efficient deal.

From a profitability perspective, unlike most of SpaceX's cash-burning businesses, Cursor has already achieved positive gross margins in its enterprise subscription segment, even though it remains unprofitable overall. Furthermore, the primary reason Cursor has yet to turn a profit is that its entire revenue is consumed by computing power costs. Following the acquisition, SpaceX will no longer need to purchase computing power externally. Consequently, Cursor is expected to quickly achieve profitability and become a cornerstone of SpaceX's operations. Moreover, Cursor can leverage SpaceX's idle computing power and convert it into subscription revenue.

Analysts point out that the acquisition of Cursor transforms SpaceX from a commercial rocket company struggling to gain traction in AI into a firm with a reliable AI distribution channel that is widely adopted by numerous high-profile enterprises.

From the perspective of SpaceX's valuation narrative, acquiring Cursor brings the company one step closer to its goal of building space data centers. According to disclosures in SpaceX's S-1 IPO prospectus, the company has outlined a strategy called Macrohard, aiming to build a next-generation, fully autonomous agentic AI ecosystem platform to facilitate the manufacturing, testing, and orbital docking of future Starships. The acquisition of Cursor will primarily help accelerate the construction of the Macrohard platform's core, bypassing the need to develop underlying tools from scratch.

This content was translated using AI and reviewed for clarity. It is for informational purposes only.

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Disclaimer: The content of this article solely represents the author's personal opinions and does not reflect the official stance of Tradingkey. It should not be considered as investment advice. The article is intended for reference purposes only, and readers should not base any investment decisions solely on its content. Tradingkey bears no responsibility for any trading outcomes resulting from reliance on this article. Furthermore, Tradingkey cannot guarantee the accuracy of the article's content. Before making any investment decisions, it is advisable to consult an independent financial advisor to fully understand the associated risks.

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