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Billionaire entrepreneur Elon Musk announced Wednesday that his artificial intelligence startup xAI will be dissolved as a standalone company and fully integrated into SpaceX, rebranding its AI efforts as SpaceXAI.
The move, posted on X, comes hours after SpaceX and xAI revealed a major compute-sharing agreement with Anthropic. Under the deal, Anthropic will gain access to the capacity of SpaceX’s Colossus 1 supercomputer in Memphis — a cluster of more than 220,000 NVIDIA GPUs — to expand Claude Pro and Claude Max usage limits.
Anthropic also expressed interest in partnering on “multiple gigawatts of orbital AI compute capacity,” citing the physical limits of terrestrial power, land, and cooling for next-generation AI systems.
“xAI will be dissolved as a separate company, so it will just be SpaceXAI, the AI products from SpaceX,” Musk said in a post on X.
Musk’s announcement signals a deeper consolidation of his AI and space businesses. SpaceX had already absorbed xAI in a formal acquisition earlier this year, but the new “SpaceXAI” framing underscores that all AI development will now operate directly under the SpaceX umbrella.
SpaceX’s AI roadmap centers on moving large-scale compute infrastructure off Earth entirely. Musk and the company have repeatedly stated that space-based data centers — powered by near-constant solar energy and cooled in the vacuum of space — represent the only sustainable path to meet exploding AI energy demands.
Key elements of the plan include deploying massive constellations of AI-capable satellites that function as orbiting supercomputers and using the Starship launch vehicle’s payload capacity to launch the heavy infrastructure required for orbital data centers. SpaceX’s long-term plans include lunar AI satellite factories and even broader solar-system-scale expansion to support Moon bases, Mars colonization, and eventual multi-planetary civilization.
The integration and orbital AI push come as SpaceX prepares for one of the largest initial public offerings in history. The company is targeting a mid-2026 IPO — possibly as early as June — with valuations discussed in the $1.75 trillion to $2 trillion range.
On Stocktwits, retail sentiment around SPACEX trended in the ‘neutral’ territory, coupled with ‘low’ message volume.
An X user wondered what the ticker for SpaceX would be after the rebrand and an IPO.
Yet another opined that combining the two companies’ capabilities would “unlock some seriously powerful synergies.”
Some users also speculated what the combined company’s new logo will look like.
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