The transaction structure remains partially opaque. The specific terms of the partnership alternative and conditions triggering either path are not yet public. SpaceX's regulatory filing confirmed the option details but did not disclose the full mechanics of how the company will decide between acquisition and partnership, or what milestones or performance metrics might influence that choice.
For attorneys tracking competitive dynamics in AI infrastructure, this signals a decisive shift in how major technology companies value developer tools. At $60 billion, Cursor's valuation places AI coding assistants in the critical infrastructure category rather than niche software. SpaceX's move—particularly the dual-path structure—suggests the aerospace company is positioning itself as a serious competitor to Anthropic and OpenAI in both AI capability and software automation. Watch for regulatory scrutiny around the deal's completion, particularly if the full acquisition proceeds, and monitor whether other aerospace or defense contractors follow with similar AI infrastructure acquisitions.