A major deal is taking shape in the AI coding space, as Cursor moves closer to a massive acquisition. The startup, co-founded by Sualeh Asif, is set to be acquired by SpaceX for $60 billion, according to multiple reports published today, Thursday. The move highlights how quickly AI-driven coding tools are gaining real business value.
Cursor has emerged as a strong player alongside companies like OpenAI and Anthropic. These firms continue to attract developers by using artificial intelligence to automate coding tasks. According to Reuters, this segment has already shown early commercial success, making it one of the fastest-growing areas in tech.
In a post shared on X, SpaceX confirmed that Cursor has granted it the right to acquire the company later this year for $60 billion. However, if the acquisition does not go through, SpaceX will pay $10 billion for the joint work completed so far. This clause shows how valuable the partnership already is.
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…
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) April 21, 2026
The company also explained the strategic value behind the deal. It said Cursor’s product and strong reach among skilled software engineers will combine with SpaceX’s Colossus training system. This system includes a million H100 equivalent units. Together, they aim to build some of the most useful AI models in the world.
Sualeh Asif’s journey adds a compelling layer to the story. He comes from Karachi, where he studied at Nixor College. Later, he moved to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, also known as MIT. During his early academic years, he represented Pakistan in the International Math Olympiad from 2016 to 2018.
While studying at MIT, Asif co-founded Anysphere with three classmates. The company built Cursor, which quickly became a popular AI-powered code editor. Before that, he had already started an AI-based search engine project during his time at MIT.
Cursor’s growth has been rapid. According to Forbes, the startup now reports more than $1 billion in annualised revenue. This makes it one of the fastest-growing AI companies in recent years.
Finally the kind of role models Pakistani youth needs: Sualeh Arif.
Not property dealers, tax evaders, bank defaulters, rent seekers, born into wealth etc.
But a self-made kid from a middle-class family in Karachi. Studied at MIT, started a hugely impactful company, changed…
— Umar Saif (@umarsaif) April 23, 2026
The success has also drawn praise back home. Umar Saif, the former federal minister for IT, highlighted Asif as an example for young Pakistanis. He described him as a self-made entrepreneur from a middle-class family. He also pointed out that Asif built a global company at the age of 26.
Cursor’s valuation has also climbed sharply. In November 2025, the company reached a $29.3 billion valuation after raising $2.3 billion. The funding round was co-led by major venture firms Accel and Coatue.
Today, Cursor’s tools are widely used across the tech industry. Millions of developers at 50,000 companies rely on it for coding tasks. These include major names like Nvidia, Adobe, Uber, and Shopify. This broad adoption shows how deeply AI has started to shape modern software development.
