Stock Markets April 22, 2026 09:48 PM

Microsoft Weighed Bid for AI Coding Start-up Cursor Before SpaceX Deal

Software giant considered acquiring Cursor but did not pursue a bid ahead of SpaceX's $60 billion accord

By Priya Menon MSFT
Microsoft Weighed Bid for AI Coding Start-up Cursor Before SpaceX Deal
MSFT

Microsoft examined a potential takeover of AI coding start-up Cursor prior to SpaceX's recent $60 billion agreement, but ultimately chose not to submit an offer. The episode highlights escalating competition for developer-focused AI tools amid heavy investments and cloud commitments by leading AI firms.

Key Points

  • Microsoft considered acquiring Cursor but ultimately did not submit a bid - impacts large-cap technology and corporate M&A activity in the software sector.
  • The AI coding market is concentrated around Cursor, Anthropic and OpenAI, with Microsoft offering GitHub Copilot - affecting developer tools and enterprise software demand.
  • Microsoft has made multibillion-dollar investments in Anthropic and OpenAI, and both firms have committed to significant Azure spending - relevant to cloud-services and data-center markets.

Microsoft evaluated an acquisition of Cursor, an AI-powered coding start-up, in the period before SpaceX disclosed its $60 billion arrangement this week, according to reporting published Wednesday. After internal consideration, Microsoft decided against moving forward with a bid.

The company has been actively expanding its suite of artificial intelligence tools for developers. Microsoft currently makes GitHub Copilot available to programmers, while the marketplace for AI coding assistants is largely influenced by Cursor along with Anthropic and OpenAI.

Microsoft’s strategy in the AI sector has leaned heavily on making strategic investments and providing cloud infrastructure. The company has invested billions of dollars into both Anthropic and OpenAI, and those firms have committed to substantial spending on Microsoft Azure for cloud services.

Cursor had been reported as seeking funding at a roughly $50 billion valuation earlier this month, a sign of strong demand for AI-driven coding solutions. In a development this week, SpaceX, controlled by Elon Musk, announced on Tuesday that it had agreed to either acquire Cursor for $60 billion by the end of the year or pay the start-up $10 billion.

The episode underscores the intensity of competition among major technology players for emerging AI capabilities targeted at software development. It also highlights how large cloud providers and corporate investors are positioning around firms that can shape developer workflows.

Details remain limited about the internal discussions at Microsoft that led to the decision not to bid. The public information confirms only that Microsoft explored the option and ultimately did not pursue a formal offer ahead of SpaceX’s announcement.

Given the commitments by leading AI companies to use Microsoft’s cloud platform and the rapid valuation moves in the AI coding space, the Cursor situation illustrates both the commercial value attached to developer tools and the strategic calculations companies are making about acquisitions, investments and cloud partnerships.


Contextual note: Public reports indicate the sequence of events described above took place this week, with the acquisition agreement or payment option announced on Tuesday and reporting about Microsoft's consideration appearing on Wednesday.

Risks

  • Uncertainty around acquisition outcomes - Microsoft explored a bid but chose not to proceed, leaving the final ownership of Cursor unresolved and creating M&A uncertainty for the software sector.
  • Valuation volatility in AI-startups - Cursor had been seeking funding at about a $50 billion valuation, and SpaceX's $60 billion acquisition or $10 billion payment option highlights potential swings in deal economics that affect investor expectations in technology markets.
  • Concentration of developer AI tools - dominance by a small number of providers (Cursor, Anthropic, OpenAI) could influence competition and pricing in developer-facing software and cloud usage, with implications for enterprise customers and cloud providers.

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