SpaceX said it has secured an option to either acquire code-generation startup Cursor, an AI code-generation startup co-founded by Pakistani-born Sualeh Asif, for $60 billion later this year, or pay $10 billion for their new partnership, as it pushes deeper into the lucrative market for AI developer tools.
Along with OpenAI and Anthropic, Cursor is one of several Silicon Valley startups that have drawn waves of developers by using artificial intelligence to automate coding, a business where AI companies have found early commercial traction.
The deal could give xAI, the Grok chatbot maker that SpaceX merged with in February, a stronger foothold in the AI coding market where it has so far lagged rivals. It also provides Cursor with more computing capacity to develop AI models.
“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,” SpaceX said in an X post on Tuesday.
“Cursor has also given SpaceX the right to acquire Cursor later this year for $60 billion or pay $10 billion for our work together.”
Colossus is xAI’s supercomputer cluster in Memphis, which it has touted as the largest in the world. The company has been spending billions of dollars on AI infrastructure.
According to Forbes, Sualeh Asif, originally from Karachi, cofounded Cursor with three friends from MIT.
Asif, boosting a net worth of $1.3 billion, represented Pakistan in the International Math Olympiad from 2016 to 2018.
As per the report, Cursor reached a $29.3 billion valuation in November 2025, after raising $2.3 billion. The startup claims to have more than $1 billion in annualised revenue.
“This is a profoundly proud moment for Pakistan, and undeniable proof for our youth that there is no ceiling to what they can achieve,” Bilal bin Saqib, the Chairman of the Pakistan Virtual Assets Regulatory Authority, said in a post on Thursday.
Saqib noted that talent has never been Pakistan’s problem. “What we lack is the ecosystem to support them locally,” he said.
He was of the view that Sualeh’s story should inspire two things in every young Pakistani, i.e. immense pride and the stubborn conviction.
“We don’t lack brilliant minds; we lack the right conditions. With the right policy, capital, and leadership that treats our youth as our greatest asset, this is a fully solvable problem,” he said.
Meanwhile, the announcement comes ahead of SpaceX’s highly anticipated public debut in the coming months, with the company eyeing a valuation of close to $1.75 trillion and a $75 billion fundraise that could go down as the biggest IPO in history.
Two product engineering heads at Cursor, a startup that sells AI models for coding tasks, said in March they joined SpaceX to contribute to the company’s lunar projects and xAI, Musk’s AI startup that is now part of SpaceX.
Musk welcomed the engineers, Andrew Milich and Jason Ginsberg, saying, “Orbital space centres and mass drivers on the Moon will be incredible.”

















