SpaceX says it has agreement to acquire Cursor for $60B
216 points by dmarcos 4 hours ago | 296 comments
https://www.reuters.com/technology/spacex-says-it-has-option...

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/21/business/spacex-cursor-de... (https://archive.ph/c2Tac)

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-21/spacex-sa...


qzw 52 minutes ago
I just want to make the observation that this whole SpaceX IPO is turning out entirely unlike the CDOs that led to the 2008 financial crisis. There's no mixing of AAA level assets with a bunch of subprime stuff and then getting someone to buy it all as AAA. Not at all similar. Completely different. Will turn out just fine this time.
reply
curuinor 43 minutes ago
It is adversely selected, but it's not debt, it's equity, so price action can go real fast and nobody will be burned except folks who soberly-or-not opted into this. Everyone _knows_ Elon is the way he is, so nobody will be _surprised_ at things. No surprise, no crisis.
reply
robertjpayne 41 minutes ago
They're going to force a S&P500 index listing on IPO day so we're all going to be forced to baghold this regardless of if we want to or not unless you've got $0 in any major retirement fund.
reply
glitchc 3 minutes ago
My money's all in Bitcoin pats himself on the back
reply
drivebyhooting 32 minutes ago
Oh yes, thanks for reminding me. I’m going to cash out the 401(k).
reply
ambicapter 28 minutes ago
You’ll pay massive penalties on that, another option is options (heh) but I’m not finance-literate enough to know how to pull it off.
reply
aaronblohowiak 14 minutes ago
Only penalties if you withdraw from 401k. Most 401k plans have some kind of moneymarket, bond fund, or similar
reply
abtinf 16 minutes ago
You can just reallocate away from an index fund.
reply
kvuj 11 minutes ago
You could just buy deep out of money SP500 puts expiring in 1+ year. That way you would be "insured" against the bubble popping.

The thing is, every dollar you spend on insurance is a dollar (and its interest) you lose. Furthermore, we don't know when it will pop. 1 year? 5 years?

The more reasonable solution is probably gradually reduce exposure to US markets by selling SP500 shares and turning to Europe and emerging markets ETFs. No need to cash out 401k.

reply
Ifkaluva 32 minutes ago
Friendly reminder that SpaceX is going straight to the index—Elon agitated for it. The 401k of everybody in America is serving as a bailout fund for X and now cursor, and whatever other trash he hovers up
reply
raw_anon_1111 26 minutes ago
They are going straight to the Nasdaq. Most index investors are invested in the S&P 500
reply
abtinf 17 minutes ago
Nasdaq is an exchange. S&P 500 is an index.

S&P 500 includes companies from multiple exchanges. Like Nvidia, which lists on Nasdaq.

reply
scarface_74 12 minutes ago
Nasdaq 100…

https://www.morningstar.com/funds/spacex-ipo-how-index-funds...

> Nasdaq was the first to consider a rule change that would grant mega IPOs like SpaceX early admission to its flagship Nasdaq-100 index. The exchange and index provider began a consultation period in February to assess the viability of and industry response to a proposed “fast entry” rule. The change was approved on March 30 and will be effective on May 1.

reply
genxy 50 minutes ago
We are better now that we learned from the first time.
reply
anonymars 41 minutes ago
Learned how to get the general public to directly put their money into it this time with the ETF shenanigans
reply
ignoramous 18 minutes ago
Institutional investors (ex: pension funds) matter more for such mega IPOs than general public, and those probably like SPAC-like supercorps?
reply
baron816 36 minutes ago
Well, there are some very important differences. 1) It’s super well known what’s going on with SpaceX. Every investor should know that there’s a lot of good stuff along with some steaming hot garbage. 2) SpaceX isn’t systemic to the economy. If SpaceX and all its subsidiaries shut down and its investors got nothing back, it wouldn’t be that big of a deal.

This type of bundling is just what conglomerates do. Is it a good thing? Not really. Many investors also hate this kind of stuff and avoid investing in these types of companies.

reply
robbies 32 minutes ago
On point #2, they are trying to do that right now. If spacex is fast tracked into the indices, passive investors via index funds will be forced into buying.
reply
huflungdung 25 minutes ago
[dead]
reply
jesse_dot_id 2 hours ago
Every time Musk does anything these days, it further reveals the shell game he's playing with his companies. This is going to be an Enron type of story eventually. I truly wish I had a choice to pull my tax money out of this particular subsidy.
reply
kakapo5672 33 minutes ago
Tesla is profitable, as a matter of public record. And SpaceX is, by all accounts, extremely profitable.
reply
fraggleysun 18 minutes ago
They had like $16B in revenue last year, half from Starlink.

That’s just money in the door and the underwriters seem to think the business is worth $1.75T.

reply
bragr 27 minutes ago
It is less about profitability and more about dilution of ownership. He seems to have a pattern of diluting the ownership of his profitable companies by folding in his less profitable/failed companies. You still own a share of a profitable company, but a smaller share, to his benefit.
reply
boshalfoshal 29 minutes ago
SpaceX is _not_ profitable by most reasonable measurements of accounting. If you discount rocket depreciation costs and R&D, then yeah its profitable from starlink revenue.
reply
geertj 24 minutes ago
SpaceX reuses its boosters 20+ times. Surely the depreciation is tiny when compared to the revenue of 60M+ per launch?
reply
hooloovoo_zoo 3 minutes ago
They also have to replace 20%+ of their satellite network every year.
reply
computerex 19 minutes ago
What about the R&D costs of blowing up vehicle after vehicle?
reply
TurdF3rguson 4 minutes ago
SpaceX was profitable before the xAI thing happened. Now I imagine they're way in the red.
reply
solarkraft 26 minutes ago
As was Enron
reply
noncoml 8 minutes ago
Genuine question, how do you know that without a 10K? Have the filed any document that shows their finances?
reply
raw_anon_1111 25 minutes ago
Tesla’s profits and market share has been declining for the past few years and it’s basically an overpriced meme stock.
reply
laughing_man 44 minutes ago
I'm not sure I follow, here. What about this makes you think this is a shell game?
reply
bko 41 minutes ago
I'm pretty sure Tesla and SpaceX are profitable and generate tens of billions in revenue. Words mean something, saying [thing i don't like] is [bad thing] is pretty lazy. How are any of these companies at all related to Enron? Or are you just anti-conglomerate where you have some parts of the business supporting others (nothing to do w/ Enron and pretty normal, how could all business arms be equally profitable?)
reply
robbies 25 minutes ago
Words do mean something, and you could have taken 5 minutes of research to make a reasonable counterclaim

Tesla has an insane PE ratio because it’s a casino stock (~350x). As a comparison, NVIDIA IS 40x. SpaceX Is projected to be 300-500x. These are fantasy, completely unrealizable valuations. Similar to Enron, and Enron was over 70x. Enron wasn’t some surprise either.

Typically when PE gets out of whack, market analyzers dig into what is happening because it’s usually chicanery. No longer. Everyone is along for the ride.

reply
hellojimbo 12 minutes ago
PE has literally nothing to do with what Enron did which was accounting fraud + cashflow problems because they actually didnt make any money, in fact they lost tons of money and used future earnings in current reporting
reply
kube-system 24 minutes ago
> How are any of these companies at all related to Enron?

There's a lot of parallels:

* Circular transactions between companies under the same control

* Using SPVs to keep debt off the books

* The supplier funding its own customer through investment to inflate revenue on both ends

* Valuations driven by a hyped up narrative and decoupled from actual fundamentals

reply
laughing_man 33 minutes ago
Tesla isn't that profitable, but SpaceX is likely generating boatloads of cash. From what I can tell Starlink alone has a free positive cash flow of about $2 billion. I'm not sure what the launch business is worth, but it's likely a lot given the absence of domestic competition.

I have a suspicion the reason Musk wanted to combine SpaceX and X.ai is the latter gives him losses to write off against all that cash from the former plus a chance for a big AI payoff.

reply
noncoml 13 minutes ago
Genuine question, how do you know that without a 10K? Have the filed any document that shows their finances?
reply
kube-system 4 minutes ago
There's a few ways

They're prepping for an IPO and there have been some anonymous insider reports of the figures in the press

There are industry estimates

Much of their income comes from public contracts

reply
ScoobleDoodle 32 minutes ago
SpaceX bought nearly 20% of Cyber Trucks sold in Q4. That makes me question the level of real profitability.
reply
noncoml 12 minutes ago
Genuine question, how do you know that without a 10K? Have the filed any document that shows their finances?
reply
taspeotis 2 hours ago
Matt Levine writes a bit about this - the Elon Musk Mars Conglomerate. And really if you're investing into e.g. SpaceX you're not investing into SpaceX you're investing into the Elon Musk Mars Conglomerate. And most people seem to want that.

Tesla's the odd one out: it's public but it's still in there, although Musk would probably prefer it to be private too.

reply
mandeepj 20 minutes ago
> Elon Musk Mars Conglomerate

That’s SpaceX’s version of Tesla’s self driving car pipe dream.

reply
ignoramous 17 minutes ago
Isn't Tesla FSD good enough and trending in the right direction to be called a "pipe dream"?
reply
fnordpiglet 47 minutes ago
Tesla is the free cashflow play that is probably the most important for mars as there is no distilled fermented dinosaur juice on mars, but considerably more by ratio of lithium / oil than the Earth. Our flintstone fire mobiles won’t work so well there, and battery / solar will be important there for everything, including mobility and armies of slave robots.
reply
Lonestar1440 2 hours ago
So SpaceX bought a $60B Option on Cursor, plus a bunch of services, for $10B.

If strike date comes and Cursor is in fact worth less than $60B... they can move to acquire it for that price. Or just let it "expire". And if it's worth more, they get a savage good deal. If the services were worth $8B anyway, it's hard to lose.

It seems less crazy to me through this lens. A straight acquisition, today, at $60B would in fact be crazy.

reply
gpm 55 minutes ago
Paying $10B for the option is also crazy though. Paying $10B for the thing outright and not just an option would be absurdly high.
reply
MPSimmons 36 minutes ago
It reportedly has a $2B ARR, and a 5x multiplier doesn't seem insane to me, but who knows, honestly
reply
danpalmer 29 minutes ago
But it's paying a 5x ARR multiplier for the right to buy at a 30x multiplier.
reply
Unit327 20 minutes ago
2B ARR at what cost base?
reply
Lonestar1440 51 minutes ago
But they also get a whole bunch of AI Services from Cursor. Other comments have noted that xAI has fallen on bad times (idk one way or the other) so perhaps they were going to spend $5B on getting these services elsewhere, anyway.

SpaceX spending $1B a month on various AI services seems ~plausible

reply
gpm 44 minutes ago
$1B per month on AI services does not seem remotely plausible to me... Engineers don't consume that many tokens...

And on the AI development side they're the ones providing compute in the form of a "million H100 equivalent Colossus training supercomputer"... On top of the cash.

reply
robertjpayne 39 minutes ago
Cursor has no AI services, they do not develop their own frontier models. I see no reason to understand why $10bn for Cursor's services is an advantage xAI versus say a $10bn deal with Anthropic, OpenAI or Google.
reply
Lonestar1440 23 minutes ago
Those other companies wouldn't also toss in a purchase option.

But I agree that it's hard to articulate what Cursor services you could blow this much money on.

Maybe it is all just an option! Or maybe they get a bunch of IP either way?

reply
NuclearPM 44 minutes ago
Plausible how? Explain please.
reply
Lonestar1440 41 minutes ago
Tokens. Tokens spawning sub agents using more tokens. Maybe some training too.

I didn't say it was Wise.

I said it seems within possibility for this, very particular, corporation.

reply
ignoramous 14 minutes ago
Despite their impressive ARR, Cursor faces existential threat from not only BigLabs (Claude Code, Open AI Codex) but also BigTech (AWS Kiro, Google Antigravity, MS VSCode). I am sure the usual suspects would have lined up to purchase Cursor, and the deal from xAI was probably the best of the lot. Marks an end to a remarkable sprint for a 3yo company, and an admirable exit (considering the recent discombobulation of Windsurf's), just as investor money and/or hype is going belly up.
reply
sheepscreek 4 minutes ago
Anyone saying this is an aquahire has it backwards. SpaceX is acquiring Cursor’s customers, all those enterprises including NVIDIA itself. I believe Jenson Huang is on the record about the engineers using Cursor everyday.

As far as I know, xAI’s enterprise market share is non-existent. This is their way to get some much needed customers.

reply
nikcub 2 hours ago
knee-jerk is that it's weird, but makes sense:

* X will have a total of ~2GW of GPU sometime this year largely not doing much outside of 'grok is this true'

* despite no longer being in vogue with consumer devs Cursor still has a lot of developer data that can assist in building a model

* Cursor have decent enterprise relationships (while for xAI it is ~zero) and that's where the real revenue for llms + agents is

* Cursor are paying retail for tokens and competing against the frontier model co's who are also their suppliers. Not sustainable (hence their in-house composer model).

* Cursor the product covers the gamut from lovable-style prompt-to-app, an IDE, cli and bugbot

* X are using "x bucks" to pay for a potential later acquisition which are arguably overvalued based on the space x IPO hype

Option there to give X a window to make it work, otherwise walk away with a $10B breakup fee for access to it's data

reply
silisili 2 hours ago
> largely not doing much outside of 'grok is this true'

Hey now, don't forget about it's super important other use, taking innocent photos of people and regenerating them in less clothing and compromising positions.

I'm sad that I even know that.

reply
Havoc 2 hours ago
You've literally got tools like opencode that are MIT licensed. Most of those points X could do on their own or are things that make this attractive for cursor not X.

e.g. Need developer data? Use some of that spare GPU compute, hand out free top end model coding access for a bit and you'll very rapidly have developer data

>decent enterprise relationships

I guess. 60B worth of "relationships" though?

reply
nikcub 2 hours ago
> hand out free top end model coding access for a bit and you'll very rapidly have developer data

They tried this - grok was free on openrouter for a while

reply
MarsIronPI 28 minutes ago
But imagine if they handed out free access to Kimi or GLM-5. Actually, I still wouldn't use it, because I avoid APIs that say they hold on to data.
reply
theturtletalks 51 minutes ago
Marketing push was there too, everyone was saying Grok had jumped Claude and Codex, yet I never got that when using all 3.
reply
Havoc 49 minutes ago
And presumably they got data from it...
reply
nikcub 29 seconds ago
and then released a model that was pretty bad at coding
reply
noelsusman 43 minutes ago
I wouldn't be surprised if those enterprise relationships evaporate after this acquisition. There's a reason why xAI has zero enterprise customers.
reply
grepfru_it 24 minutes ago
> There's a reason why xAI has zero enterprise customers

I’m curious where you pull these stats from

reply
Reubend 2 hours ago
I think you're right. Other providers can offer coding subscriptions that use in-house models, and this sets the stage for a Grok coding plan that's built in to Cursor.

$60 billion seems expensive, but it gives them a much better chance at competing in the market than if they started their own harness from scratch.

reply
JustExAWS 19 minutes ago
Absolutely no enterprise - I work in enterprise cloud consulting - absolutely no company would trust Grok with their IP compared to Anthropic or OpenAI with Musk’s reputation on how he runs his businesses.

Anthropic just tolerates the money losing developers who pay $20/$200 for subscriptions.

reply
martinald 2 hours ago
Yes I think you're right. Reinforcement learning is extremely compute heavy, which cursor doesn't have. And X.ai doesn't have the coding agent data anthropic/OpenAI has, but does have the compute.

However, one thing in AI is that while the usage goes up extremely quickly, it tends to go down just as fast. I know a lot of companies that are in the process of switching from Cursor to Claude Code, so in 6-12 months I'm not entirely sure of the data quality/quantity.

Also I think it is telling that they are calling them SpaceX not X. The X brand is absolutely toxic, especially in enterprise.

reply
cubefox 2 hours ago
You forgot to consider whether all this is worth $60B.
reply
JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago
> forgot to consider whether all this is worth $60B

I see two possibilities:

(1) SpaceX is paying with stock; and

(2) the $60bn pay-out is (a) conditional or (b) never going to be exercised, it was a stalking horse for negotiating the $10bn terms, which gives SpaceX everything it actually wants.

reply
goosejuice 2 hours ago
$1B to $2B ARR in a few months with projection of $6B ARR by years end. If xAi wants to have it's own tools just like OpenAI and Anthropic, then it's not an unusual move.
reply
nikcub 2 hours ago
it's not dollars it's X bucks
reply
armanj 2 hours ago
hn is this true
reply
NuclearPM 41 minutes ago
British?

“Cursor have” and “Cursor are” is awkward to read.

reply
vehemenz 28 minutes ago
Now you know what it feels like to be British reading practically any other English source on the Internet.
reply
yungbeto 2 hours ago
Why would Elon do this if he knows full well the names X-Code and Codex are already taken?
reply
ValentineC 55 minutes ago
> Why would Elon do this if he knows full well the names X-Code and Codex are already taken?

Steal their Twitter usernames anyway, just like he did mine.

reply
Forgeties79 47 minutes ago
Story time please lol
reply
ValentineC 32 minutes ago
My @valentine got changed to @valentine_ without my consent.

https://web.archive.org/web/20150822195811/twitter.com/valen...

https://twitter.com/valentine_

(If any lawyers read this and feel up for taking this on contingency, I don't think I'm difficult to contact.)

reply
alasano 28 minutes ago
Wow and it's not even used. I guess they took it to resell on their handle marketplace?
reply
mayowaxcvi 2 hours ago
Laughed very hard at this. Well done. Feel like you must have made this observation a while ago and just waited for your moment.
reply
jacobedawson 2 hours ago
Best I can do is CurXr
reply
pixelpoet 2 hours ago
The whole thing is Curxed
reply
foota 29 minutes ago
That's curxed
reply
speed_spread 42 minutes ago
Cuxed
reply
prawn 2 hours ago
Xursor?
reply
martythemaniak 20 minutes ago
Quick! Both the .com and .AI are available!
reply
hackernudes 20 minutes ago
XCursor (Linux nerds know)
reply
martythemaniak 2 hours ago
Because Xurxor is free! If that's not a winning brand, I don't know what is.
reply
floatrock 44 minutes ago
Honestly, just shorten it to Xor. That's actually not half-bad dev branding.
reply
selimthegrim 16 minutes ago
I don’t know about you, but do you want Xenu and Zurvan’s love child in charge of your development?
reply
anonymid 2 hours ago
I guess the hope is that combining two sub-par coding models (xAI's grok + cursor's composer) and combining the data they have access to, they can build something that can compete with OpenAI / Anthropic in the coding space...

I guess I kinda see it... it makes sense from both points of view (xAI needs data + places to run their models, cursor needs to not be reliant on Anthropic/OpenAI).

I think I don't see it working out... I just don't see an Elon company sustaining a culture that leads to a high-quality AI lab, even with the data + compute.

reply
tombert 2 hours ago
I was required to use Cursor for my job when I first started, but once I figured out how to use the command line version of Codex, I kind of stopped seeing the point. It just kind of seemed like a bloated, overpriced wrapper around what I could do with the included ChatGPT membership I already had for work.

Maybe I was missing something, but I do not understand how it is worth sixty billion dollars.

reply
jjordan 14 minutes ago
It's not. It's a glorified code editor with no moat. Those are (massive) bubble prices.
reply
theahura 2 hours ago
Lots of people in the comments talking about how this is about training data, but surely this is actually about hiring competent people after the mass exodus/firing at xAI?
reply
airstrike 53 minutes ago
Whoever thinks the talent pool is this limited that it requires offering Cursor of all places $60B is pattern-matching so hard they might as well be a quilt.
reply
bensyverson 2 hours ago
That's quite a pricey acquihire
reply
noelsusman 40 minutes ago
$60 billion worth of competent people?
reply
raw_anon_1111 2 hours ago
Are cursor developers “competent” in creating frontier models? Aren’t they just using other company’s models?
reply
jeffgreco 2 hours ago
60b?
reply
mirekrusin 23 minutes ago
10b active it seems
reply
Rapzid 2 hours ago
Wow, we are seeing the dark underbelly of the beast here. Nobody talks about cursor anymore for a reason. Look, I'm not saying it's not useful and discounting anyone getting value out of it...

But it's clearly not worth 60B dollars in April 2026.

reply
miffy900 2 hours ago
Yep. there's absolutely no way that Cursor is worth that much.

for contrast, Elon paid $44b for twitter back in 2022. When you adjust for inflation, Twitter was acquired for $49b in 2026 money. Cursor getting bought for 1.22x more is just insanity.

Elon seems unwilling to shake off the image that he has basically no idea what he's doing.

reply
laughing_man 40 minutes ago
I certainly wouldn't mind having that image if it meant being the wealthiest man in the world.
reply
websap 57 minutes ago
I think X paid for itself, so it worked our for him.
reply
numpad0 47 minutes ago

  > Nikita Bier @nikitabier
  >  
  > If you’re seeing a bunch of Japanese posts, here are some fun facts:
  > Japan has more daily active users and more time spent on X than any other country in the world.
  > Over two thirds of the country is monthly active on X. 
  > X in Japan has one of the highest penetration rates of any social network in history.
I wouldn't be so sure when "any other country except US" usually apply to everything on the Internet, except Twitter after the power transfer

1: https://twitter.com/nikitabier/status/2037764895064867061

reply
_--__--__ 27 minutes ago
I'm pretty sure that claim about Japanese Twitter activity was true for most of the site's history pre acquisition
reply
numpad0 9 minutes ago
No. JP activity was always second to US, only the biggest "out there". Same is true for all Twitter-like social media, such as Mastodon and Bluesky. Even VRChat doesn't have a majority Japanese userbase. Japan actually becoming the top majority anywhere is an anomaly and a major reversal of power balance.
reply
bix6 48 minutes ago
Source?
reply
vkou 45 minutes ago
It paid in influence, not dollars. Billionaires don't buy newspapers or social media platforms because they think they are good businesses.
reply
manquer 2 hours ago
It is not cash though. SpaceX does not have $60B liquid cash instruments.

More accurately it is 3.4% of Space at the last rumored valuation of $1.75T of SpaceX.

reply
throwaway85825 2 hours ago
There's not going to be $60B of exit liquidity if/when spacex IPOs. Maybe the suckers will be banks lending against the bubble valuation.
reply
cuuupid 53 minutes ago
No longer rumored as they filed for IPO!

This is actually an amazing sweetheart deal for Cursor. Many times with these high profile acquisitions, most stock is tied to LPA's and employment at the company, and also earnout provisions. The company then finds a way to parachute them out early, which both voids the earnout and their employment, thus they never vest most of the units and the few units they do vest get bought out at 409A valuations which are typically much, much lower.

In the case of Cursor this is an amazing boon as SpaceX listed at an almost 100x multiple which is absolutely staggering. Had SpaceX stayed private they could have 409a'd Cursor and got it for effectively ~100M$ cash.

reply
jeffgreco 2 hours ago
A crazy and lucky bailout for Cursor + investors.
reply
bluefirebrand 2 hours ago
Forget bailout, this is a massive payday for them
reply
bensyverson 2 hours ago
Elon got snowed…
reply
moralestapia 59 minutes ago
Which includes OpenAI, btw.

Not just OpenAI, but OpenAI and OpenAI[1].

1: https://cursor.com/blog/series-a

reply
squidsoup 2 hours ago
The only reason I haven't switched back to VS Code is pure laziness, not using any AI features in Cursor other than resolving diffs these days.
reply
cleaning 54 minutes ago
Just because it's not discussed much on HN does not imply it is not relevant in the broader space. Cursor is still very much prevalent there with 1 mil DAU.
reply
therobots927 59 minutes ago
It makes you wonder how much of this is essentially money laundering.
reply
Me1000 2 hours ago
Cursor's statement on the deal (which does not mention the option at all): https://cursor.com/blog/spacex-model-training
reply
vardump 3 hours ago
60B. That's a completely crazy price. Great for Cursor, I guess. If it happens, that is.
reply
laughing_man 38 minutes ago
That price may not get paid. The only thing SpaceX has committed to so far is $10 billion for their shared work.
reply
muyuu 2 hours ago
Great for the shareholders at least.
reply
sippeangelo 3 hours ago
That's a hefty payday for a model that barely functions! Every time I run out of API credits and get kicked back to Composer 2 I feel like I'm better off just packing up for the rest of the month.

I feel like we're finally at a point where you don't have to constantly argue with and constantly babysit coding models, which makes it even more frustrating when you're suddenly forced to deal with one that ignores your instructions and gets stuck in thinking loops again.

I suspect it's the vast troves of training data rather than any tech that Cursor possesses that SpaceX is after...

reply
impulser_ 2 hours ago
Cursor is still the best coding environment and hardness. It's actually not really close. They are so good that they actually made Gemini usable.

The problem is they can't compete with Anthropic and OpenAI because they can't sell Opus and GPT at a discount to subscribers like OpenAI and Anthropic do with their subscriptions.

So they either need to build a competing model or slowly die.

reply
goolz 58 minutes ago
I personally disagree on the first point. Claude code in a terminal with vim is much nicer. I just don’t see the need for the bloat of an IDE when the CLI versions work so damn well now.
reply
impulser_ 22 minutes ago
They have Cursor CLI.

Cursor is essentially all the Claude Code products but without the horrible bugs of Claude Code products.

You can transfer from CLI to web and it actually works.

reply
bakies 44 minutes ago
And Claude can use CLI too. It's the perfect environment for coding agents.
reply
muyuu 2 hours ago
They seemed to be doing fine with Kimi distillation. Not speaking from experience though, I prefer to use my editor.
reply
tootie 2 hours ago
Bet they will become tied to grok pretty soon.
reply
bastawhiz 3 hours ago
I doubt they're buying it for Composer, I imagine they're buying it for the agent harness. It's arguably the best non-Anthropic agentic coding harness, and you get _all the models_ for one subscription price.
reply
muyuu 2 hours ago
Maybe vertical integration is the main business case.

A controlled environment to determine effort and token usage, and to get plenty of exclusive training on code.

It could end up making sense. Idk if they needed to offer 60B though.

reply
cyberax 3 hours ago
JetBrains is crying in the corner...
reply
mikert89 2 hours ago
Jetbrains has gone so far downhill
reply
ellisv 2 hours ago
I honestly can’t believe how poorly JetBrains has done. I used to love PyCharm but now it’s so far behind. I still use DataGrip but it is absolute dogshit when it comes to agentic coding.
reply
jasonjmcghee 2 hours ago
I was a massive jetbrains fan - still believe it's the best IDE even with it's massive performance issues.

But I just... barely use an IDE anymore. I think I have the lowest possible subscription price for "all products" you can have (at least as an outsider) and I think I'm going to cancel this year. I've been paying for a decade+

reply
FpUser 2 hours ago
I am subscribed to their all you can eat plan and use their Junie coding agent which is included with subscription with some free tokens. I then pay for extra tokens on on-need basis and all works like a charm. So far I pay (well my clients do as I bill separately for that) about $100 a month to cover my current coding needs. All works as a charm. I mostly use their CLion, Webstorm and PyCharm IDE's for development, sometimes other as well. All in all dev experience is excellent and far exceeds that of Cursor I was trying to use for a while.

Not sure what problems people here have with JetBrains offerings

reply
jasonjmcghee 3 minutes ago
Once you work somewhere that gives you unlimited opus 4.6 and learn how to use it properly, your perspective of what you should be doing day to day shifts.

Honestly unlimited codex with 5.4 high has a similar effect.

reply
FpUser 2 hours ago
I use JetBrain's all you can eat subscription that comes with their Junie coding agent which includes some free tokens to cover my coding needs. I then top up tokens on on-need basis. Costs me about $100 / month in AI tokens (well I bill my clients for that separately so do not really care bout the price). All works as a charm. I mostly use their CLion, Webstorm and PyCharm IDE's for development, sometimes other as well. All in all dev experience is excellent and far exceeds that of Cursor I was trying to use for a while.

Not sure what problems people here have with JetBrains offerings

reply
sheeshkebab 2 hours ago
IntelliJ is a bit dated, and its plugins are too. I use IntelliJ all the time, in its various incarnations, but vscode is really up there now.
reply
soco 2 hours ago
Unless you do Jakarta EE development, where Cursor with their simple LSP support is far, far behind. Cool for generating a bean, but when you got to debugging deployment descriptors you wish you were in IntelliJ.
reply
richardlblair 53 minutes ago
Cursor is great. I was using it up until recently. Then I switched oh my pi, and honestly I haven't looked back. I've also heard great things about open code.
reply
boplicity 2 hours ago
I actually really like Composer 2. For my use case, between the planning tool, and getting it to ask a lot of clarifying questions, I regularly get very good results. I'm not doing anything complex though; mostly staying in the lane of very common web app type code.
reply
DosUser88 2 hours ago
Composer 2 is really good for me too.
reply
beambot 2 hours ago
They still just bought access to all the code you've ever fed into the model...
reply
542458 2 hours ago
Cursor very reasonably had a “no retention” checkbox available to everyone, including those on free plans.
reply
shimman 50 minutes ago
I'm sure those work as well as the "don't collect my data" checkboxes too.
reply
542458 19 minutes ago
I don’t think this is the case. With “accidentally” collecting an individual’s data, the company’s risk is that somebody cares enough to sue them based on vague and poorly defined damages. With “accidentally” collecting source code, you’ve not only violated your contract with 98% of your enterprise customers (many of which have dedicated legal departments) providing a very real and obvious path to lawsuits, you’ve also gained a strong reputation as a vendor never to be trusted. My employer uses cursor, and I strongly suspect we would cut ties and blacklist them at the first sign of them inappropriately retaining data.
reply
starkeeper 2 hours ago
[flagged]
reply
oliyoung 30 minutes ago
Cursor ($60b) being valued the same as Twitter ($51b inflation adjusted) is _willlld_
reply
dantihanyi 3 hours ago
Bloomberg reporting its an agreement to either acquire for $60B later this year or pay $10B to work together https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-21/spacex-sa...
reply
albertwang 3 hours ago
Here’s the spaceX announcement (non-paywalled): https://x.com/spacex/status/2046713419978453374
reply
mlindner 3 hours ago
Can you change the title?
reply
dantihanyi 3 hours ago
NYTimes has updated the title "SpaceX Strikes Deal With Cursor for $60 Billion"
reply
Jtsummers 3 hours ago
@dang does nothing, he is unlikely to see it. If you actually want to reach the mods, email them. There's a Contact link at the bottom of almost every page here on HN.

EDIT: Parent commenter edited out the @dang from their comment making mine appear to be responding to something not in their comment.

reply
dantihanyi 3 hours ago
Thanks for the info! I removed the callout
reply
markthethomas 3 hours ago
yup - updated
reply
cj 3 hours ago
Rockets, satellites, social media, AI - the only thing missing from the SpaceX hype portfolio is a certain coworking company. That would really set them up for an exciting IPO.
reply
chrisweekly 31 minutes ago
what about blockchain? /s
reply
AirMax98 3 hours ago
What are we even doing here.

I have no idea what this has to do with aerospace, but I know a bit about software and this does not look great. Cursor is obviously on a serious decline and has little to no moat in the area they are building in (IDE), which we kinda now know is maybe not even the right area (CLI). I feel like this is just a bad move?

reply
joegibbs 2 hours ago
SpaceX is just going to be the Musk Company minus Tesla. X Corp, the X parent, is a subsidiary of xAI which is a subsidiary of SpaceX. This seems back to front, but I suppose SpaceX has the better reputation for investors whereas if X owned SpaceX the IPO would be devalued by the association with Twitter.
reply
Lermatroid 3 hours ago
AFAIK cursor is basically the only player right now not subsidizing tokens out the ass, and has been seeing solid growth across individual and enterprise with almost every model performing best in their harness. Not sure how that’s a serious decline.
reply
calmoo 3 hours ago
On the contrary, anecdotally, myself and every engineer I know have switched fully from cursor to claude code since the start of the year. I now use zed with cc. I personally could not stand the buggy mess and constant UI changes of cursor. It’s also not good value in terms of claude tokens compared to claude code.
reply
brightball 2 hours ago
What sold you on Zed?
reply
SwellJoe 2 hours ago
No one wants an IDE, anymore. They're building a better horse.
reply
chrisweekly 35 minutes ago
Decent analogy in 2nd sentence BUT the 1st doesn't hold water. TIMTOWTDI, statements about "everyone" or "no one" are highly suspect, and the trend of code-assist -> agentic -> delegated / orchestration is just that (a trend), not a universal law. Even in a full-on maximalist yolo paperclip future, many experts will likely ALWAYS want access to a decent IDE. (Note I'm not saying Cursor is necessarily that IDE, and I'm not commenting on the valuation.)
reply
cleaning 50 minutes ago
In my opinion, the IDE interface still has not been beaten if you are working on a serious codebase where you are reviewing each diff.
reply
Analemma_ 2 hours ago
I would like to know where you’re seeing this, because my strong impression is exactly the opposite: a year ago, everyone was talking about Cursor, but I haven’t heard anything about it in months. It’s all Claude Code and Codex now. In terms of mindshare they seem dead already.
reply
skippyboxedhero 45 minutes ago
wait a few months, been using claude code since beta, there are issues but it takes time to realise what they are. people who have been using claude since 2024 began moving away before Anthropic's marketing blitz at the end of last year.

Cursor's token utilization is significantly better than Claude Code. Composer's latest model, for coding, is very competitive on quality given price and was clearly well-optmiized (in two months, you will hear almost nothing else than how expensive Anthropic is...this is before they try to release the really expensive models). so many very obvious things like this if you have been using this tech every day for multiple years.

unfortunately, the competition in this space is very weak because of how dominant cursor has been (Kilo/Roo/Cline all have major implementation issues with token utilization, everyone else is trying to go all in on agentic). don't see this getting better until things get much worse because of anthropic/agentic. from the decisions that anthropic is making, it seems they are busily digging their own grave. growth will come after this.

reply
htrp 2 hours ago
cursors internal model efforts have not been able to meaningfully exceed the performance of the frontier models.
reply
skippyboxedhero 53 minutes ago
IDE is a moat with people who can code.
reply
scottyah 2 hours ago
Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google are all investing heavily in their desktop type apps, I think the TUI phase is coming to an end.
reply
wrqvrwvq 3 hours ago
ai trends seem to mirror general coding/software trends but compressed. People used to edit programs with sed, but the ide proved to be more powerful from every perspective. cli tools always have their place for "power-users" and other specialized intermediate usecases like tui's, but in general the ide has overtaken every aspect of cli use and many devs hardly ever use the terminal. I suspect a similar thing will happen with ai.
reply
ajross 3 hours ago
While surely someone has done human-driven editing with sed, that's not what it's for. Remember that ed is the standard editor.
reply
SilverElfin 3 hours ago
Isn’t it obvious? Musk bailed out his Twitter investors with xAI. Then he bailed out xAI with SpaceX. Now he realizes that no one thinks xAI is worth the hundreds of billions he claimed it was in that potentially fraudulent transaction, and is trying to make Grok and xAI relevant by getting access to customers in the AI coding space. But in the end, it’s SpaceX share holders who are being made fools of and soon, especially with the Nasdaq fast track changes to incorporate SpaceX forcefully into everyone’s passive investments, the public will be the one who is made poorer. But Musk will become a trillionaire.
reply
cindyllm 3 hours ago
[dead]
reply
infinitewars 3 hours ago
Trying to posture for Golden Dome, but politically he is likely locked out of the contract.
reply
JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago
> no idea what this has to do with aerospace

SpaceX is no longer SpaceX per se, but SpaceX-xAI.

My TL; DR (and this is mine, personally) is its mission has pivoted from colonising Mars to building a Dyson sphere. Space-based datacentres are a demand excuse for putting lots of solar panels in space. Going one level down, more Cursor use is a demand excuse for putting lots of datacentres anywhere.

reply
riffraff 3 hours ago
This is like me, a couch potato, pivoting from "I'm going to run a half marathon" to "I'm going to do a marathon in under ten minutes"
reply
tadfisher 3 hours ago
If we're talking Dyson spheres, this is like going from a half-marathon to running the distance from Earth to Betelgeuse. It's just not a realistic endeavor.
reply
sobellian 3 hours ago
More like "I'm going to run every possible marathon route on the Earth's road network."
reply
JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago
It's a mission, not a business plan. Colonising Mars was always a moonshot as well. But it aligned the company's priorities.

My point is regardless of what you think of a Dyson sphere, this theory seems to predict what the company does better than assuming everything's a ketamine fever dream.

reply
cramsession 50 minutes ago
> this theory seems to predict what the company does better than assuming everything's a ketamine fever dream.

I think Musk being a ketamine addict explains a lot and this is very aligned. Given that he can't build a self-driving car, he would have to be under the influence of very strong drugs to think he could build a Dyson sphere of all things.

That being said, some sort of financial fraud is even more on brand.

reply
BobbyTables2 3 hours ago
Plot twist: Build the Dyson sphere around Earth and charge for sunlight…
reply
ButlerianJihad 2 hours ago
"Have You Ever Seen the Sun Set at 3pm?"

https://youtu.be/hjdMYyjnmks?si=iyoVV-oZAPmQtp1B

reply
kibwen 3 hours ago
> its mission has pivoted from colonising Mars to building a Dyson sphere

Obligatory mention: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fLzEX1TPBFM

reply
JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago
She put it in the same category as AI or human-shaped robots. Those are two things Musk is working on. I stand by my theory.
reply
codingusuir 3 hours ago
this is Elon's desperate move to fix his weak coding problem. He recently stated he feels he is far behind in agentic coding, and that apparently that's what matters.
reply
JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago
> He recently stated he feels he is far behind in agentic coding, and that apparently that's what matters

Sure. My question was why. And my loose interrogation of the question, together with some unique domain expertise, suggests he found an excuse to work towards a Dyson sphere.

reply
kevin_thibedeau 3 hours ago
He's offloading the loss from buying Twitter. This is the smoke and mirrors phase.
reply
JumpCrisscross 3 hours ago
> He's offloading the loss from buying Twitter

That already happened with xAI-X merged with SpaceX.

reply
alyxya 3 hours ago
This is the right partnership to happen. SpaceX has all the compute but is missing the talent for training LLMs, especially on the RL side. Cursor has the talent and RL stack, but doesn't have their own pretrained base model or own their compute. Both will be on a bad trajectory without cooperating because Claude Code and Codex have gained so much momentum already.
reply
zzleeper 3 hours ago
I'm sworn off from Musk-related products, and this will prob make cursor worse (switch to X's LLM for instance). So, any suggestions for switching? Codex; Claude Code? (I like my IDE and I like the freedom to choose a model, which is why I stuck with Cursor even when it felt more expensive)
reply
lemonish97 3 hours ago
OpenCode and Github copilot are still options if you want the freedom to choose different models.
reply
mininao 2 hours ago
Dammit, I liked cursor
reply
apsurd 2 hours ago
same. i finally tried Claude Code and i just shrugged. Cursor definitely has a clunky UI with an identity crisis, but it pioneered plan mode, and auto / composer chugs along without rate limits for the most part.

Opus, I watch my allotment creep up every turn…

reply
throwaway85825 2 hours ago
We have reached peak stupid.
reply
sethops1 2 hours ago
I thought the same during the NFT craze and the blockchain craze before that.
reply
andrekandre 2 hours ago
its definitely the worst case of money poisoning i've ever seen
reply
woeirua 3 hours ago
This feels like another Twitter moment... unless he's absolutely desperate for engineers who can train LLMs. In that case it's basically an acquihire. Otherwise, this makes absolutely zero sense.
reply
lacunary 3 hours ago
did cursor do model training? I thought it used models built by other companies
reply
taskylizard 3 hours ago
reply
lossolo 3 hours ago
It's fine tuned Kimi, they didn't train it from scratch.
reply
cdrnsf 3 hours ago
That's an expensive VS Code fork.
reply
muyuu 2 hours ago
They moved on from that code base iirc. Still insane, mind.
reply
nickvec 2 hours ago
I'm out of the loop - what moat does Cursor even have now, and why is it worth $60B?
reply
squidsoup 2 hours ago
Why did a shoe company get $50 million in funding for their AI pivot?
reply
nickvec 56 minutes ago
Because VCs are braindead... I see your point.
reply
argsnd 3 hours ago
$50bn for a harness makes no sense, what am I missing?
reply
girvo 3 hours ago
I assume someone knows someone, backroom deal perhaps? I'm not sure either, when Cursor has a lot of risk and not that much moat.
reply
kube-system 18 minutes ago
Cursor has a significant enterprise userbase, that has to be worth something
reply
riffraff 3 hours ago
My 2c: they need to pump xAI usage (which nobody is using) to be able to keep the hype alive pre-ipo.
reply
timmg 3 hours ago
I thought Cursor has started making their own models. Did I confuse them with someone else?
reply
edaemon 3 hours ago
Their Composer 2 model is Kimi (an open model) with additional RL fine-tuning, for whatever that information is worth to you: https://techcrunch.com/2026/03/22/cursor-admits-its-new-codi...
reply
timmg 3 hours ago
Oh, I see.

Though, in fairness, that's probably the important part. Like a base model plus "coding smarts" is probably perfect for the situation.

But maybe not as much value as I was thinking.

reply
_--__--__ 3 hours ago
They have a 'proprietary' model which is just an open source (kimi?) fine tune
reply
gip 3 hours ago
For a successful IPO and attract more capital you need a very good story/narrative. That what is being crafted here. Business fundamentals matter less with elon!
reply
lossolo 3 hours ago
1. Pay them with shares of SpaceX

2. Make SpaceX valuation even higher before IPO

3. Boost XAI/usage of Grok.

reply
xqcgrek2 3 hours ago
money laundering and tax avoidance
reply
xnx 3 hours ago
How would this be money laundering?
reply
dogscatstrees 3 hours ago
Value shifting. Search for SolarCity and cousin Lyndon Rive.
reply
bmitc 3 hours ago
Musk passing around his debt from purchasing Twitter.
reply
wavemode 48 minutes ago
It looks like this is just an "option" to acquire Cursor at that price? Implying they only plan to exercise the option under certain conditions (such as, one might presume, Cursor actually being worth that much. As right now it definitely isn't.)
reply
lemonish97 3 hours ago
What's Cursor's moat here? I'm a bit surprised that xAI/SpaceX needs to buy them rather than building their own VScode forked IDE or an agentic UI/CLI.
reply
babelfish 3 hours ago
It's data. Nobody is using Grok for SWE work, but they are using Cursor.
reply
andreygrehov 2 hours ago
Could be contracts.
reply
kommunicate 46 minutes ago
Hard to know whether development will remain an activity that lives on a local machine for much longer.

This could be a lot of money to spend to acquire users that may not be sticky.

reply
coalstartprob 25 minutes ago
my only gripe rn is grok is still a shitty model to use. yeh it scores nearby openai and anthropic on benchmarks, but my personal experience has been underwhelming
reply
AJRF 3 hours ago
I am part of a discord group with about 1000+ devs. I polled them in Jan to see if they had dropped cursor for claude code.

80% of those responded (250ish in the group had). Bit of selection bias there from the question - but my impression was Cursor is very much dying to competition from the labs.

reply
kristopolous 2 hours ago
Wish I played that interview game better. I saw the success coming from a mile away (2022) but I can't vibe with people in the hire game right. It's like eye contact, smiling, facial expressions, stuff like that.

I guess there's a bunch of tools to not suck at this. Anyone had success here? The AI tools say I'm great because they can't pick up the kind of problems I'm talking about.

reply
taurath 2 hours ago
Pretend to and/or be motivated by things other than money, that’s the strongest thing interviewers drop people from, even though they’re motivated by money to be there.
reply
kristopolous 2 hours ago
Interesting. I genuinely do not care about money.

The motivation of money is literally zero to me. Maybe that's a problem as well: they want people who Are motivated by money acting like they aren't?

I wanted in because I saw them doing exciting impactful things That's literally it.

I dunno. I've been struggling with this for decades

reply
airstrike 54 minutes ago
Just act hard for the duration of the interview season.
reply
don_neufeld 3 hours ago
If Twitter was when Musk jumped the shark this is definitely him sticking the landing.
reply
r3451 3 hours ago
Elon doesn't know what to do. Ani failed, no one apart from his alt accounts is interested in Grok pictures.

Since the firing of several Grok founders, Grok has decreased in capabilities. It is illogical and insults users when called out.

So he does what everyone does. Write more dev tools, slap a price on it and hope retail investors will be impressed in the IPO. The $60 billion is of course optional and will just be used in the IPO to inflate the valuation.

reply
taurath 2 hours ago
Why $60b and not $20b? Why not $10b or $500m?
reply
babelfish 3 hours ago
Good on them to get $10B breakup terms, after the Twitter shitshow
reply
throwatdem12311 2 hours ago
Cursor better take the $60B because a VS Code fork with a crappy fine tune of Kimi is not worth that much.
reply
andreygrehov 2 hours ago
I wonder if they are actually 'acquiring' some of the existing contracts between Cursor and X/Y/Z rather than the product itself.
reply
int32_64 3 hours ago
>acquire Cursor later this year for $60 billion or pay $10 billion for our work together.

This seems like an elaborate Elon rug pull. A Windsurf situation 2.0

reply
mercurialsolo 49 minutes ago
every wrapper either gets acquired or stays long enough to be a zombie startup
reply
digitaltrees 39 minutes ago
Well I am glad I built my own IDE now so I can switch off of cursor and don’t have to participate in training the model of an aspiring monopoly.

DM me if you want an invite. I am keeping it to a small on purpose.

reply
Tyrubias 2 hours ago
I’m no fan of Elon Musk, but even from a neutral perspective I’m bewildered by the merger between X, X.ai, and SpaceX and now this acquisition of Cursor. What’s the endgame? How does this help with the whole vision of “we all live in space and mine resources from the Moon and have data centers on Mars”?
reply
danny_codes 2 hours ago
The endgame is to game the index funds by bribing or otherwise.. convincing the big stock exchanges to forgo their index inclusion rules so SpaceX will get included in Nasdaq 100 within 10 days or something stupid like that. SpaceX will initially float a tiny fraction of shares at a wildly inflated value and use a combination of artificial scarcity and Elon Stans (retail) to keep the stock from crashing until it gets included in the indexes. Then, your 401k will auto-buy SpaceX, letting insiders exit at their ludicrous valuation.

Eventually, stock prices will correct hard, and retail/passive investors will be left with the bag.

The idea that merging these companies has some business purpose is hilarious. It’s purely financial engineering. Unfortunately, our existing system has little consumer protection against this kind of fraud, so Elon will probably get away with it, at least in the short term

reply
JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago
> endgame is to game the index funds

Buying Cursor does nothing for this.

reply
3eb7988a1663 2 hours ago
It gives them some amount of paying customer base using AI. That is some magic voodoo you need to sprinkle onto the public sale to get the highest possible price point.
reply
CGMthrowaway 43 minutes ago
X doesnt yet have a paying customer base using AI?
reply
numpad0 2 hours ago
idk but feels like this might be a new literal kind of acquihire, to bulk purchase workers in cash
reply
fontain 2 hours ago
The Elon Musk Company does what Elon Musk wants. Tesla is dying, X is a disaster, so he bundled everything into the one company that had a bright future, SpaceX. There is no grand vision or endgame beyond do as Elon Musk wants. Going to Mars or the Moon or whatever was never a vision or mission, just a story to tell.
reply
Rover222 2 hours ago
Model Y is still the best selling car in the world (and still the best-selling car in China), but yeah Tesla is *dying.
reply
JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago
> What’s the endgame? How does this help with the whole vision of “we all live in space and mine resources from the Moon and have data centers on Mars”?

I put this in the other thread, but my personal working hypothesis is the SpaceX/Musk mission has pivoted from colonising Mars to building a Dyson sphere.

Space-based datacenters are a demand excuse for putting solar panels (and eventually, solar-panel fabrication) in space. Cursor is a demand excuse for building more datacenters (and eventaully, learning to fabricate chips). If I'm correct, the next acquisition will be in some chip or solar-panel fabrication bottleneck.

To be clear, I'm not advocating for this mission. (Though I do think the space-based datacenter pitch has gotten more scepticism than it deserves. For realistic interest-rate and terrestrial-delay values, assuming ongoing AI demand, it breaks even for surprisingly-proximate radiator-mass values. Obviously more problems beyond my toy model to solve. But I expected the math to say fuck you out the gate.)

I'm saying this is a good working theory for explaining–and predicting–Musk and SpaceX's actions. Mars explains why SpaceX's engines burn methane. Dyson sphere explains why xAI is building massive datacenters and now finding acquisition targets to fill them with.

reply
taurath 2 hours ago
> building a Dyson sphere

So they are trying to take everyone’s money in bigger and bigger chunks until there is no economy left but hype.

Folks, if we spent 1/10th of the time and money we spend on this bullshit on taking care of people’s basic needs and education we would be far closer to the sci-fi future everyone seems so motivated to get to. Covid and the Trump cult seem to have broken almost everyone’s brains and we’re all gonna pay for the hubris.

reply
syntaxing 2 hours ago
60B for Composer 2…that is built from Kimi K2… what ever happened to “Grok being the best”?
reply
apsurd 2 hours ago
Am I the only one that thinks Composer is really good, when you factor in the speed and the cost?
reply
vachina 23 minutes ago
Composer is clearly dumber than the rest but then I only ask it dumb questions and it answers them really quickly.
reply
syntaxing 2 hours ago
I don’t doubt it is. End of the day, it’s a fine tuned Kimi. They tried to hide it and making their work sound more impressive than it is. It’s easy to have stuff be cheap when you don’t have to train your own model from scratch.
reply
Marciplan 2 hours ago
yes, you are
reply
NuclearPM 47 minutes ago
A text editor?
reply
fantasizr 2 hours ago
reading this thread, I seem to be the only cursor user on earth on the free tier using tab-completes.
reply
tailscaler2026 2 hours ago
cursor was interesting about a year ago
reply
arlattimore 3 hours ago
SpaceX, xAI, Collosus data centers, next space compute, X, Starlink and soon Cursor to join 2, 3 & 4 together?
reply
benjx88 2 hours ago
but What exactly is SpaceX doing in the AI Space (Pun Intended) and Why?

these are weird times...

reply
atlbeer 3 hours ago
Is this Cursor the product? Or AnySphere the company?
reply
albertwang 3 hours ago
SpaceX’s announcement (non paywalled):

https://x.com/spacex/status/2046713419978453374

reply
stingrae 3 hours ago
"SpaceXAI and @cursor_ai are now working closely together to create the world’s best coding and knowledge work AI.

The combination of Cursor’s leading product and distribution to expert software engineers with SpaceX’s million H100 equivalent Colossus training supercomputer will allow us to build the world’s most useful models.

Cursor has also given SpaceX the right to acquire Cursor later this year for $60 billion or pay $10 billion for our work together."

reply
jhack 2 hours ago
RIP Cursor.
reply
vemv 27 minutes ago
Musk must be chronically surrounded by yes-men.
reply
boznz 3 hours ago
Looking forward to seeing where this goes, both companies have a reputation for engineering excellence.
reply
Rover222 3 hours ago
Misleading title on the post - SpaceX has the OPTION to buy them for $60B later this year, or pay $10B for their work together.
reply
jmyeet 3 hours ago
I really don't know what Elon is thinking here because SpaceX's IPO is already precarious, for several reasons:

1. It was used to rescue himself and key investors from overpaying for Twitter, which was first rescued through xAI (and I don't know why anyone thought investing in xAI was a good idea but here we are). If our regulators weren't defanged, this deal would've gotten alot more scrutiny (IMHO). Whatever the case, this is all diluting the SpaceX business for overpriced AI vaporware;

2. From what I can find, SpaceX's revenue in 2025 was ~$18B with a $5B loss. That doesn't sound like a $1.5T+ company to me;

3. The markets are being rigged to make the IPO a success by changing the rules to force passive funds to buy into it with a tiny float (5% instead of the normal 25%); and

4. Here's the big one. I think Starship is a badly designed program that's going to take many billions more to complete and commercialize. There's not really a market for bigger payloads (evidence: ~1 Falcony Heavy launch per year) and STarship will effectively have to compete with Falcon 9 at a time when reusable alternatives (eg from the Chinese as well as Blue Origin) are coming to market.

reply
NetMageSCW 2 hours ago
Starship won’t compete with F9, or BO because it is fully reusable and cost less than either. The Chinese are not a player in the global launch services market at all so don’t count.

Starship isn’t comparable to Falcon Heavy because it has vastly more volume, which will make it the cheapest way to launch Starlinks, which will be a lot of launches to begin with.

reply
mandevil 2 hours ago
There is a lot resting on Starlink, 11 gigadollars in direct revenue that accounts for fully 60% of SpaceX's total revenue of 18 gigadollars. It's hard to see how that level of revenue can sustain a 1 terradollar valuation.

Like, TSLA had 94 gigadollars in revenue last year, and it's a 1.2 terradollar company, and most outside analysts are frankly skeptical of that multiple. SpaceX is trying to get a similar valuation on a fifth of that revenue.

reply
electrondood 2 hours ago
xAI is working on virtualizing white collar workers. I'm guessing this is part of that.

See also: companies buying up the Slack and email archives of defunct startups, for training data.

reply
evanwolf 3 hours ago
Is X political ideology extending to cursor?
reply
leptons 2 hours ago
I don't know but I won't touch anything Elon owns with a 10,000 foot pole.
reply
Marciplan 2 hours ago
immediately unsubscribed from Cursor. Hello OpenCode!
reply
winfredJa 53 minutes ago
same. moving to zed
reply
5129ah 3 hours ago
See also:

https://www.reuters.com/technology/spacex-says-it-has-option...

Personally, I have been granted the option to buy Tesla for $30 trillion by the end of this year or pay $500 billion for a partnership. It'll all happen, I swear.

reply
bmitc 3 hours ago
Government subsidized purchase of a private company. Fantastic. All funded by the taxpayer to send rockets to a dead planet and to burn up all the energy on our alive but suffering planet.
reply
NetMageSCW 2 hours ago
Point to any government subsidies for SpaceX - or do you think your salary is a subsidy and everything you do at work is worthless to your employer?

SpaceX has paid for contracts to deliver services to the government and those services have saved the government billions of dollars compared to the alternative.

reply
bmitc 42 minutes ago
You're claiming that SpaceX has not received governmnent subsidies, grants, and contracts?

> those services have saved the government billions of dollars compared to the alternative

Source? All I can find is some guy saying it.

And it doesn't really matter what they've saved. It doesn't excuse conflicts of interest.

reply
seatac76 3 hours ago
Ohh it’s not an acquisition, it’s right to buy later for $60B or we a work together for $10B. Huh?
reply
break_the_bank 3 hours ago
really happy for the Cursor team but at the same time disappointed that the biggest non-lab AI company couldn't exist on their own.

shows how intense the power laws are around ai and how much of a capital game it is.

reply
SwellJoe 2 hours ago
lol. Top business genius being a genius again, I see.
reply
tim-tday 2 hours ago
Fuck. This is a problem.
reply
danny_codes 2 hours ago
Are there not a bunch of cursor clones? Seems like a really simple product to build
reply
jeffbee 2 hours ago
Only 1.5 Twitters. Sort of pathetic!
reply
jMyles 3 hours ago
I imagine none of us had this on our bingo cards.

If this is an acquihire, it doesn't compute for me (though I can't say I understand how things work in the world of the 60B level). LLMs are new enough that nobody has a big enough headstart to warrant a 60B personnel change.

The IPO angle also doesn't make sense. Musk cultists were gonna buy anyway; this doesn't change that. And for everyone else, who wants to pay down debt on an acquisition whose effect will almost certainly not be palpable in mainstream circles, if at all?

I don't fully understand the influence that comes with SpaceX subsidies and government contracts, but I gotta believe that rounding up non-lab AI chops are on that agenda?

The exact options - 60B for acquisition (obviously not a cash deal, right?) or 10B for unspecified services rendered... also don't make sense for either of the first two.

Is this just a way of the government securing contractors by proxy that wouldn't pass muster if done through the normal channels?

reply
throwaway613746 3 hours ago
[dead]
reply
cranberryturkey 2 hours ago
[dead]
reply
kelsey98765431 3 hours ago
Time to download windsurf
reply
seatac76 3 hours ago
60 Billion for an IDE?

I guess back to Jetbrains it is.

reply
focusgroup0 3 hours ago
The other day my colleague asked Grok:

"Please estimate Elon's IQ based on his timeline"

It estimated 115-130. A decision like this points to the lower end.

reply