SpaceX just cut a $60B deal with an AI startup built by 4 MIT dropouts — its CEO is 25 and worth $1.3B

SpaceX just cut a B deal with an AI startup built by 4 MIT dropouts — its CEO is 25 and worth .3B


Elon Musk’s SpaceX just made a deal with a coding startup founded by four college kids who dropped out of MIT three years ago.

On April 21, SpaceX announced on X (1) that it is working together with Cursor, an AI coding tool used by 64% (2) of Fortune 500 companies, to develop what it called “the world’s best coding and knowledge work AI.”

The deal has two parts: SpaceX pays Cursor $10 billion for their work together, or it acquires the company for $60 billion later this year.

As SpaceX put it, “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.” (3)

Cursor CEO Michael Truell responded on X that he was “excited to partner with the SpaceX team to scale up Composer” — the name of Cursor’s AI model. (4)

Truell grew up in New York City and attended Horace Mann, a private prep school in the Bronx. He enrolled in MIT, finished his first year, and landed a summer internship at Google at 18, where he worked on language models for feed ranking.

During that internship, he met Ali Partovi — an early investor in Facebook and Airbnb — who was recruiting for his Neo Scholars program, an accelerator for young tech talent. Truell completed a written coding test Partovi gave him in record time, and Partovi marked his name so emphatically that he committed to invest in whatever Truell built next. Truell became one of just 30 Neo Scholars selected that year, and Partovi became one of Cursor’s first investors. (5)

Truell and three MIT classmates — Aman Sanger, Sualeh Asif and Arvid Lunnemark — left school in 2022 to start Anysphere, the company behind Cursor. Their first two ideas to build a coding assistant for mechanical engineers and a message encryption project failed. They then pivoted to AI coding — a space they had initially avoided because, as Truell told Y Combinator’s AI Startup School, “we thought it was too competitive.” (6)

Cursor launched in March 2023 and became what many in the industry call one of the “fastest-growing SaaS companies” in history (7), reaching $100 million in annualized revenue in 12 months — even faster than Slack in its early days. Cursor’s valuation went from $2.5 billion in January 2025 to $29.3 billion by November 2025 after raising $2.3 billion in Series D funding (8).


finance.yahoo.com
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