I think $SPCX IPO and $60B Cursor acquisition is one of the most sophisticated capital allocation and option structuring play I've seen.
TL; DR
→ On April 2026, SpaceX signs a partnership with Cursor, including an option to buy it for $60B later this year.
→ If it doesn’t buy, it pays about $10B ($1.5B termination fee + $8.5B in compute) to support joint work.
→ Regardless, SpaceX training of Cursor models on the Colossus supercomputer starts immediately.
→ On June 12, SPCX debuts on Nasdaq. Stock opens ~$150 and surges. Market cap quickly exceeds $2T.
SpaceX formally exercises the option and signs the definitive merger agreement to acquire Cursor for $60 billion in SPCX Class A stock:
→ Pure all-stock merger, not a cash deal and explicitly not using IPO proceeds with minimal dilution (~3.4%).
→ That means, the $75B+ IPO raise stays earmarked for Starlink, rockets, and core operations.
They waited until after the IPO created liquid, high-valued stock. Paying with “expensive” SPCX shares minimizes real economic cost while the valuation narrative is strongest.
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One move, three problems solved:
➥ Compute + distribution flywheel
Cursor brings elite dev workflow and daily high-quality code data; xAI brings Colossus, one of the largest training clusters on earth
➥ Narrative flip
Rocket co with AI dreams" becomes "full-stack AI infra + apps.
➥ Higher multiples, new verticals De-risked
The April option tested the partnership before committing $60B. Low downside, high upside
Don’t overlook this: SPCX’s unlock doesn’t stick to the usual 80‑day cliff. It’s built a staggered, rolling rollout that meters tokens out over time, easing supply in instead of dropping a single towering sell wall. (They seems learn a lot from crypto tokenomics, lol)
Well played Elon, well played.
#SPCX #SpaceX #AI #stocks