I saw the headline last month and honestly scrolled past it — another AI company acquisition, who cares. But this one's actually worth a second look if you write code for a living.
Cursor's parent company, Anysphere, is getting absorbed into SpaceX. $60 billion, all stock, deal reported by CNBC here. Most of what's been written about it is finance-desk stuff — IPO timing, share structure, how fast the revenue curve went up and to the right. Nobody's really talked about what it means for the tool itself, which is the part I actually care about.
What happened, quickly
SpaceX had an option to buy Anysphere sitting around since April, and in June they used it. Once the deal closes (expected sometime this quarter, still pending regulatory approval), Cursor becomes part of the same company that owns xAI and Grok. So Elon's AI stack, which never really had a coding product of its own, suddenly has one — same category as Claude Code from Anthropic or Codex from OpenAI.
On its own that's just an acquisition. Companies buy companies. But there's a piece of this that actually changes the product, not just the org chart.
The part that actually matters
Cursor's whole thing, since it launched, was that it didn't care which model you used. Claude, GPT, Gemini, its own Composer model — you picked whatever worked for the task and Cursor got out of the way. That's a big reason a lot of teams picked it over something tied to a single vendor.
Once your editor's parent company also owns a frontier model, "we don't care which model you use" gets a lot harder to actually believe, even if nothing changes on day one. There's a quote from an analyst at Futurum Group that stuck with me — he said moving inside a model vendor turns a model-agnostic layer into a captive one. That's the whole risk in one sentence. Enterprise teams are already treating Cursor less like a neutral tool and more like a bet on one company.
I'm not saying Cursor gets worse next week. I'm saying if you picked it because it let you shop around, that reason just got shakier.
What I'd actually keep an eye on
Not going to pretend I have a crystal ball here, but if I were running Cursor day to day, this is what I'd watch instead of doom-scrolling about it:
Whether the model picker starts quietly defaulting to Grok/Composer instead of staying neutral. Whether the pricing gap between first-party and third-party models (which already showed up this month) gets wider once the deal actually closes. Whether the data/training policy changes once Cursor sits under new ownership — worth a second read once that happens instead of assuming it's the same as before. And if your company has an enterprise contract with Cursor, it's probably worth an email to whoever owns that relationship, just to ask what happens to it.
None of that is a reason to switch tools today. It's a reason to actually read the changelog for once instead of clicking past it.
Where I land on this
I don't think Cursor is doomed, and I'm not telling anyone to jump to Claude Code or Codex out of pure caution. Tools get bought all the time and plenty of them keep getting better afterward. But "who owns the company behind my editor" is now a real factor in choosing a coding tool, in a way it wasn't six months ago. That's new, and I don't think enough people are talking about it.
I mostly live in VS Code with Copilot day to day rather than Cursor, so I'm watching this one from the outside — but I'm curious how it looks from the inside.
If you're actually running Cursor right now: does any of this change what you're doing, or does it not matter at all to you? Curious if I'm overthinking a corporate acquisition that has nothing to do with the editor you open every morning.
Top comments (0)