SpaceX has obtained Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence startup, xAI, forming the world’s most beneficial private corporation, the spaceflight corporation declared on Monday.
Musk, who is also the CEO of SpaceX, wrote in a memo posted to the rocket corporation’s website that the merger is mainly about forming space-based data facilities — an concept he has become fixated on over the previous few months.
“Recent advances in AI are dependent on huge terrestrial data facilities, which needs vast amounts of power and cooling. Global electricity demand for AI cannot be met with terrestrial solutions, even in the near term, without implementing hardship on communities and the environment,” he wrote. (xAI has been indicted of imposing some of that hardship on the communities near to its data centers in Memphis, Tennessee.)
The tie-up values the combined corporation at $1.25 trillion, as per the Bloomberg News, which was first to report the finished deal. SpaceX has been reportedly making ready an IPO for as early as June of this year. It’s unclear whether or not the merger will affect on that timeline. Musk did not address the IPO in his public memo.
The merger brings together of Musk’s corporations, each with its very own financial challenges. XAI is recently burning around $1 billion per month, as per Bloomberg. SpaceX, meanwhile, creating as much as 80% of its sales from releasing its very own Starlink satellites, as per Reuters. Last year, xAI acquired X, the social media corporation also owned via Musk, with Musk claiming a linked corporation valuation of $113 billion.
Musk wrote in his memo that it’ll take a constant stream of many — although he did not state how many — satellites to form these space-primarily based data facilities, ensuring that SpaceX will have a fair-larger constant circulation of revenue for the foreseeable future. (That sales loop probable looks even more attractive when you remember that satellites are needed to be de-orbited every 5-years by the Federal Communications Commission.)
While space data facilities may be the stated aim, SpaceX and xAI have very different near-term objectives.
SpaceX is recently looking to prove that its Starship rocket is capable of bringing astronauts to the moon and Mars, while xAI is competing with leading artificial intelligence corporations like Google and OpenAI. The pressure on xAI is so great, the Washington Post reported Monday, that Musk released restrictions on the corporation’s chatbot Grok — which contributed to it turning into a tool for making AI-generated nonconsensual sexual imagery of adults and children.
Musk is also the head of Tesla, The Boring Company, and Neuralink. Tesla and SpaceX previously invested $2 billion every in xAI.











