SpaceX makes $60bn AI acquisition as it leapfrogs Amazon in market va…

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SpaceX has struck a $60bn deal to buy the maker of fast-growing coding app Cursor, as a blistering stock-price rally propelled Elon Musk’s rocket company ahead of Amazon in market value.

SpaceX shares climbed 9 per cent at the open on Tuesday, its third day of trading after Friday’s record-breaking initial public offering, in one of the most anticipated debuts in stock market history.

That took its gains to more than 50 per cent since the group listed on Nasdaq, surpassing Amazon to become the world’s fifth-largest company by market value.

SpaceX’s valuation on Tuesday was above $2.7tn, eclipsing Amazon’s $2.67tn.

Musk and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, who also owns rocket company Blue Origin, have become rivals in a new space race, as well as jockeying for the title of world’s richest person.

But the narrow gap between the two companies’ price tags belies a vast gulf between their underlying businesses. Amazon’s revenue grew to $717bn last year, with net income of $78bn, while SpaceX’s sales were $19bn, with a net loss of $5bn.

The latest rally came as SpaceX announced a $60bn deal to buy the maker of AI coding app Cursor. The agreement caps an extraordinary ascent for the four-year-old “vibe coding” start-up, which is already bringing in billions of dollars in annualised revenue.

Bar chart of Market capitalisation ($tn) showing SpaceX challenges Amazon

Texas-based SpaceX’s market value has risen more than $750bn since its IPO was priced at $135 a share, reaching $2.53tn at Monday’s close.

In a sign of surging investor demand, SpaceX on Monday exercised an option to sell more shares, increasing its proceeds from $75bn to $85.7bn.

On Tuesday, SpaceX said it would exercise its option to acquire Anysphere, developer of Cursor, in an all-stock deal that expands the capabilities of its Grok model into the most lucrative corner of the AI market.

The two companies struck a partnership in April that included the right for SpaceX to buy the San Francisco-based company.

Software engineering has emerged as the most successful application of generative AI since OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot. However, SpaceX’s AI model, Grok, has lagged behind rivals OpenAI and Anthropic in developing tools capable of writing and debugging code, prompting its swoop on Cursor.

Founded by four 20-somethings in 2022 as an alternative to Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot coding assistant, Cursor quickly became one of the fastest-growing start-ups that Silicon Valley has ever produced.

Over the course of 2025, its valuation surged more than 10-fold, from $2.5bn to nearly $30bn, as the trend for “vibe coding” or fully automated software development took off.

Cursor originally used Anthropic’s Claude model to power its coding agent. After Anthropic launched a competing product, Claude Code, last year, Cursor switched to its own models.

The SpaceX IPO has made Musk, who owns just over 40 per cent of the lossmaking company and has a large stake in Tesla, the world’s first trillionaire.

SpaceX’s corporate governance regime also gives Musk complete control of a company whose ambitions include founding a 1mn-strong colony on Mars and starting a lunar economy to build a network of orbital AI data centres.

Investors in passive funds that track the Nasdaq, FTSE and MSCI are expected to give the shares a boost in the coming weeks after SpaceX was fast-tracked into the benchmarks.

The debut of SpaceX, whose businesses include social media platform X and AI lab xAI, is set to help pave the way for Anthropic and ChatGPT developer OpenAI, both of which are working on their own trillion-dollar listings this year.