SpaceX S-1 Discloses $45B Anthropic Compute Deal and SpaceX AI Pivot · history
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2026-05-24 19:42 UTC · 179 items
What
SpaceX's May 20, 2026 S-1 IPO filing disclosed a $1.25 billion-per-month compute deal with Anthropic for COLOSSUS and COLOSSUS II capacity — approximately $45 billion through May 2029 [2][3] — and the formal acquisition of xAI into a new SpaceXAI division. Anthropic's financial position is now multiply confirmed: a $30 billion equity raise at a $900 billion valuation [16][17][18], a $30 billion annual revenue run rate [20], and an official expanded partnership with Google and Broadcom for compute capacity worth hundreds of billions [22][23] that points to active supply-side diversification beyond SpaceX. Goldman Sachs has been named lead left underwriter for the IPO [14], while Musk's post-IPO voting control is confirmed at 79% [46], drawing sustained governance criticism from Harvard Law, Reuters, and the NYC Comptroller. The Google-SpaceX orbital data center talks have been widely amplified with space stocks jumping on the news [34], establishing a potential second anchor customer for infrastructure that SpaceX's own S-1 warns may not pay off [40].
Why it matters
The SpaceX IPO is simultaneously testing whether Anthropic's compute costs are sustainable against its revenue trajectory, whether orbital AI infrastructure can attract enough anchor customers to justify the capital risk, and whether institutional investors will accept Musk's 79% post-IPO voting control in a company seeking a $2 trillion valuation. Anthropic's official Broadcom deal adds a fourth question: if Anthropic is building compute supply alternatives at scale, does the SpaceX arrangement carry the strategic weight the S-1 implies — or is it one of several roughly interchangeable supply relationships?
Open questions
Goldman Sachs is confirmed as lead left underwriter [14] and the IPO book-building process is advancing — will institutional investors ultimately accept Musk's 79% post-IPO voting control [46], or will governance concerns from Harvard Law [42], Reuters [41], and the NYC Comptroller [45] force structural modifications before the IPO prices?
Anthropic officially announced an expanded partnership with Google and Broadcom for compute capacity worth hundreds of billions at 3.5GW [22][23][24] — does this first-party confirmation signal that Anthropic is actively diversifying compute supply away from SpaceX, and if so, how does that affect the load-bearing strategic role the S-1 assigns to the Anthropic relationship?
Google is reportedly in talks with SpaceX about orbital data centers [33][35][34] while Anthropic already agreed to 'consider' the same infrastructure [32] — does Google's potential entry validate the orbital compute market, or does it mean SpaceX must split anchor-customer commitments previously associated primarily with Anthropic?
CNBC reports analysts flagging mega-IPOs as a potential market-top signal [15] and Morningstar continues to document accelerating xAI losses [48][49] — at what scale of xAI losses and under what macro-market conditions does the IPO's $2 trillion valuation target become untenable?
Narrative
The Anthropic–SpaceX compute deal entered public record on May 7, 2026, when CNBC reported a joint announcement of a compute partnership with a 'space development component' [1]. The full financial terms became visible on May 20 when SpaceX published its S-1 IPO filing: Anthropic agreed to pay $1.25 billion per month for capacity on the COLOSSUS and COLOSSUS II data centers in Memphis, Tennessee, running from May 2026 through May 2029 and totaling approximately $45 billion [2][3]. Capacity is ramping at reduced fees through mid-2026 before reaching full monthly payments, and either party can exit with 90 days' notice [3]. All of COLOSSUS I's capacity is dedicated to Anthropic [4][5], while COLOSSUS II is equipped with NVIDIA GB200 NVL72 systems also used to train Grok 5 [6]. The S-1 simultaneously disclosed SpaceX's acquisition of xAI into a new SpaceXAI division overseeing the Grok model family [7], with the filing's strategy section titled 'Our AI Compute Infrastructure Advantage and Growth Strategy,' claiming a $26.5 trillion total addressable market and citing SemiAnalysis's own infrastructure cost research as evidence for SpaceX's build-cost moat [8][9]. Piper Sandler characterized the filing as 'aspirational' in a Bloomberg video appearance [10][11]; Business Insider described it as 'a wild bet on the gnarly physical future of AI' [12]. Valuation targets range from $1.75 trillion [4] to $2 trillion [13]. Goldman Sachs has been named lead left underwriter for the offering [14], advancing the IPO machinery, though CNBC separately reported that analysts are flagging the wave of mega-IPOs — including SpaceX — as a potential market-top signal [15].
Anthropics financial position has been confirmed at scale by major outlets. Bloomberg, the Wall Street Journal, TechCrunch, and CNBC all report that Anthropic is in talks for or has agreed to a $30 billion equity raise at a $900 billion valuation [16][17][18][19]. Sherwood News confirmed a $30 billion annual revenue run rate [20], and Reuters reported Anthropic is nearing its first quarterly profit despite its massive compute commitments [21]. Critically, Anthropic has now officially announced an expanded partnership with Google and Broadcom for compute capacity [22] — a deal the WSJ confirmed involves Broadcom supplying AI chips to Google and compute capacity to Anthropic in an arrangement worth hundreds of billions at 3.5 gigawatts of capacity [23][24]. The SpaceX arrangement is one piece of a broader compute strategy that also includes a reported $33 billion with Amazon [25] and a substantial Google Cloud arrangement [26], bringing Anthropic's total contracted compute footprint above $90 billion. If the $30 billion ARR figure holds, Anthropic is spending the equivalent of its full annual revenue on compute commitments — a bet that revenue growth outpaces infrastructure costs that Reuters' profitability report suggests may be materializing. The Broadcom deal specifically adds a supply-side chip alternative to NVIDIA-based infrastructure, confirming that Anthropic is actively hedging its compute dependence across vendors rather than treating SpaceX as a strategic anchor.
The orbital data center dimension has acquired multiple new participants and significant market attention. In January 2026, SpaceX filed with the FCC for approval of a million-satellite orbital data center constellation powered by solar panels [27][28][29], with FCC documents publicly available [30][31]. The deal's 'space development component' refers specifically to Anthropic agreeing to consider using this future orbital infrastructure [32]. TechCrunch reported that Google is also in talks with SpaceX about putting data centers into orbit [33], a development since amplified by Investor's Business Daily — which noted space stocks jumping on the partnership reports [34] — as well as Yahoo Finance [35], Facebook groups [36], Reddit [37], and financial analysis outlets [38][39]. SpaceX's own S-1 warns investors that orbital AI data centers 'may not pay off' [40], an asymmetric disclosure that sells the vision to enterprise customers while hedging it for public market investors.
A governance risk narrative has become a sustained sub-story. Reuters reported before the S-1 that SpaceX's IPO structure gives Musk sweeping power and curbs shareholder rights [41]. After the filing, Harvard Law's Corporate Governance blog titled its analysis 'Top IPO, Weak Governance' [42], TechCrunch detailed how the structure specifically expands Musk's post-listing control [43], Business Insider documented Musk's plan to maintain 'complete control' [44], and the NYC Comptroller's office described the arrangement as 'unprecedented control' [45]. CryptoBriefing specified that Musk will retain the CEO, CTO, and chairman roles after the IPO with 79% voting control [46]. On the financial side, Morningstar has continued calling xAI's spending 'reckless' and losses 'accelerating' [47][48][49], TechCrunch documented a $6.4 billion annual burn rate with no sign of deceleration [50], and 24/7 Wall St. argued that Grok's competitive weakness could specifically undermine the entire SpaceX IPO thesis [51] — positioning the model business not merely as a financial drag but as a credibility problem for the infrastructure-centered IPO narrative.
Timeline
- 2025-10-01: Elon Musk publicly states 'SpaceX will be doing this' on orbital data centers, establishing the concept as a company commitment [52]
- 2026-01-31: SpaceX files FCC application for a million-satellite orbital data center constellation powered by solar panels; FCC documents published [27][28][29][30][31]
- 2026-04-03: NPR covers the feasibility of AI data centers in space and SpaceX's orbital compute ambitions [67]
- 2026-04-22: Technology.org reports SpaceX warned investors in pre-IPO materials that orbital AI data centers may not pay off [40]
- 2026-04-29: CNBC reports Anthropic is weighing a fundraise at a $900 billion valuation, topping OpenAI [19]
- 2026-04-30: TechCrunch reports Anthropic's potential $900B+ valuation round could close within two weeks [18]
- 2026-05-01: Cloud Services Agreements between Anthropic and SpaceX go into effect; capacity begins ramping at reduced fees on COLOSSUS and COLOSSUS II [3][2]
- 2026-05-06: Reuters reports SpaceX's IPO structure gives Musk sweeping power and significantly curbs shareholder rights [41]
- 2026-05-07: CNBC reports joint Anthropic–SpaceX announcement of compute deal with a space development component — first public disclosure, predating the S-1 [1]
- 2026-05-12: Bloomberg reports Anthropic in talks to raise $30 billion at a $900 billion valuation; TechCrunch reports Google and SpaceX are in talks to put data centers into orbit [16][33]
- 2026-05-19: Goldman Sachs named lead left underwriter for the SpaceX IPO; Harvard Law Corporate Governance blog publishes 'Top IPO, Weak Governance' analysis [14][42]
- 2026-05-20: SpaceX S-1 IPO filing published, disclosing full financial terms of the $1.25B/month Anthropic compute deal, the xAI acquisition, and orbital data center ambitions [2][3][7]
- 2026-05-20: SemiAnalysis publishes multi-tweet thread surfacing key S-1 disclosures: Anthropic deal terms, GB200 NVL72 hardware in COLOSSUS II, AI strategy framing, and citation of SemiAnalysis cost research [2][6][8][9]
- 2026-05-20: SpaceNews reports Anthropic agreed to consider using SpaceX's planned orbital data center satellites; TechCrunch publishes analysis of xAI's $6.4B annual burn rate [32][50]
- 2026-05-21: Reuters reports the IPO targets a $2 trillion valuation and that Anthropic is nearing its first quarterly profit; Ars Technica publishes skeptical analysis of SpaceX's AI pivot [59][13][7]
- 2026-05-21: Morningstar publishes multiple critical analyses of xAI finances — 'reckless,' losses accelerating; Piper Sandler calls the S-1 'aspirational' on Bloomberg video [47][55][48][56][57][10][11]
- 2026-05-21: TechCrunch details how SpaceX's IPO structure expands Musk's post-listing control; Business Insider reports Musk's plan to keep complete control and frames the IPO as 'a wild bet on the gnarly physical future of AI'; CryptoBriefing specifies 79% voting stake [43][44][12][46]
- 2026-05-22: 24/7 Wall St. argues Grok's competitive weaknesses could undermine the SpaceX IPO thesis; CNBC reports analysts flagging mega-IPOs as a potential market-top signal; Investor's Business Daily reports space stocks jumping on Google-SpaceX orbital data center talks [51][15][34]
- 2026-05-24: Sherwood News confirms Anthropic's $30B revenue run rate and expanding Broadcom and Google partnerships [20]
- 2026-05-24: Anthropic officially announces expanded partnership with Google and Broadcom for compute capacity; WSJ confirms Broadcom deal worth hundreds of billions at 3.5GW capacity [22][23][24]
Perspectives
SemiAnalysis
Treats the SpaceX S-1 as a significant infrastructure economics document, highlighting the Anthropic deal's extraordinary scale, the hardware inside COLOSSUS II, and the unusual fact that the filing cites SemiAnalysis's own cost research as supporting evidence for SpaceX's build-cost advantage thesis.
Evolution: consistent
Simon Willison
Surfaces the Anthropic compute commitment figures from the S-1 with minimal editorial commentary, letting the scale of the numbers speak for itself.
Evolution: consistent
Ars Technica
Skeptical: argues that SpaceX's $26.5T TAM claims and AI-first rebranding are undermined by Grok's current failure to win customers from OpenAI and Anthropic, and that the company's AI ambitions remain unproven at the model level despite infrastructure scale.
Evolution: consistent
SpaceX (via S-1 filing and public statements)
Claims AI is its primary business and largest opportunity; positions data center construction cost advantage as a durable moat; frames the Anthropic deal as validation of its compute infrastructure; targets AI leadership through rapid compute scaling both on the ground and in orbit. Simultaneously discloses to investors that orbital data centers may not pay off.
Evolution: consistent
Morningstar
Calls xAI's financials 'reckless,' argues xAI is draining SpaceX's cash with little to show for it, and warns that losses are accelerating — a sustained institutional critical campaign amplified across PitchBook, InvestmentNews, and social media.
Evolution: consistent — campaign continued with additional social media amplification
Reuters
Covers multiple dimensions without strong editorial judgment: the $2 trillion IPO ambition, Anthropic's profitability milestone, Musk's sweeping post-IPO governance control, and Goldman Sachs's role as lead underwriter — treating the full story as a consequential market event.
Evolution: expanded — Goldman Sachs underwriter reporting added to earlier financial, governance, and deal coverage
SpaceNews
Reports the concrete link between the deal's space development component and SpaceX's orbital data center plans — Anthropic agreed to consider using satellite-based compute facilities — without overt editorial judgment.
Evolution: consistent
TechCrunch
Covers multiple critical angles: xAI's $6.4B burn rate, how the IPO structure specifically expands Musk's personal control, Google's orbital data center talks with SpaceX, and Anthropic's valuation round — a mix of financial, governance, and competitive reporting that tends toward scrutiny of SpaceX's claims.
Evolution: consistent
Harvard Law / Corporate Governance community
Characterizes SpaceX's IPO as a 'Top IPO, Weak Governance' case, raising concern about Musk's near-unchecked post-listing voting control and reduced shareholder rights. The NYC Comptroller's office amplifies the same concern, calling the control structure 'unprecedented.'
Evolution: consistent
Business Insider
Frames SpaceX's IPO as 'a wild bet on the gnarly physical future of AI,' capturing both the ambition and the risk of the orbital infrastructure vision, while separately documenting Musk's plan to maintain complete post-IPO control.
Evolution: consistent
Piper Sandler
Characterizes SpaceX's S-1 as 'aspirational' in a Bloomberg video appearance, positioning the firm alongside the skeptic chorus while remaining more measured than Morningstar's 'reckless' verdict — an institutional voice calling for calibration rather than alarm.
Evolution: expanded — Bloomberg video appearance added to earlier written coverage
24/7 Wall St.
Argues that Grok's competitive weaknesses — its failure to match ChatGPT and Claude in market share — could specifically undermine the entire SpaceX IPO thesis, since the AI model business is central to SpaceX's narrative but currently losing billions.
Evolution: consistent
Anthropic (via financial coverage and official announcements)
Implicitly validates SpaceX's infrastructure by committing $45B, while simultaneously officially expanding partnerships with Google and Broadcom for compute capacity worth hundreds of billions — confirming a multi-vendor compute strategy rather than exclusive SpaceX dependence. Confirmed $30B ARR and near-first-profit status suggest the economics may be sustainable.
Evolution: expanded — Anthropic's own official announcement of the Google/Broadcom partnership resolves earlier uncertainty; the supply-diversification thesis is now confirmed first-party rather than inferred from third-party reporting
Goldman Sachs
Named lead left underwriter for the SpaceX IPO, placing the firm's institutional credibility behind the offering and signaling that the book-building process is advancing toward a formal pricing.
Evolution: new voice
CNBC analysts / market observers
Flagging the wave of mega-IPOs including SpaceX as a potential market-top signal, adding a macro-market risk layer to the company-specific governance and financial concerns already circulating.
Evolution: new voice
Investor's Business Daily
Covers the Google-SpaceX orbital data center talks as market-moving news — space stocks jumped on the partnership reports — framing the orbital compute vision as a near-term equity catalyst rather than a speculative long-term bet.
Evolution: new voice
Tensions
- SpaceX's S-1 frames its AI infrastructure as a path to AI model leadership, yet it simultaneously depends on $45B in revenue from Anthropic — one of the dominant AI model providers it aims to displace — creating a structural conflict between supplier and competitor roles. [2][7][53]
- SpaceX projects a $26.5T AI addressable market and positions Grok as a flagship product, while Morningstar calls xAI's financials 'reckless' and losses 'accelerating,' TechCrunch documents a $6.4B annual burn rate, and 24/7 Wall St. argues Grok's competitive weakness could specifically undermine the IPO — a compound skeptic case that infrastructure revenue alone cannot validate the model business. [7][9][55][50][51][48][47]
- SpaceX sells customers on future orbital data center satellites — Anthropic agreed to 'consider' using them, Google is reportedly in talks, and space stocks jumped on the news — while simultaneously warning IPO investors in its own S-1 that orbital AI data centers 'may not pay off,' presenting opposite framings of the same technology to two distinct audiences. [32][33][40][27][1][34]
- Harvard Law, Reuters, and the NYC Comptroller's office argue Musk's 79% post-IPO voting control represents a structural governance failure in a company seeking a $2 trillion public valuation, while SpaceX's track record implicitly frames concentrated founder control as a feature enabling its achievements — a governance-vs-performance debate at unprecedented scale. [42][41][45][43][44][46][13]
- Ars Technica argues Grok is currently losing ground to ChatGPT and Claude, while a LinkedIn analysis contends Grok has been gaining market share on both — the divergence turns on whether X-bundled distribution counts as genuine AI product adoption. [7][66]
- Anthropic's official announcement of a Broadcom compute partnership worth hundreds of billions at 3.5GW suggests active supply diversification away from SpaceX-exclusive infrastructure, while SpaceX's S-1 narratively positions the Anthropic relationship as cornerstone validation of its compute advantage — a tension between the strategic weight each side assigns the deal. [22][23][2][9]
Sources
- [1] Anthropic, SpaceX announce compute deal that includes space development — reactive:anthropic-colossus-deal (2026-05-07)
- [2] SpaceX also disclosed exactly how much their deal with Anthropic is worth. They state that they have "entered Cloud Serv… — SemiAnalysis Twitter (2026-05-20)
- [3] Quoting SpaceX S-1 — Simon Willison (2026-05-20)
- [4] SpaceX Sells Full Colossus 1 Compute to Anthropic Weeks Before $1.75 Trillion IPO — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [5] Anthropic to use all of SpaceX-xAI's Colossus 1 data center compute — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [6] they also include some nice pictures of some GB200 NVL72 racks in COLOSSUS II (4/5) https://t.co/sOjdPJ5OOl — SemiAnalysis Twitter (2026-05-20)
- [7] As Grok flounders, SpaceX bets future on beating Big Tech at AI — Ars Technica AI (2026-05-21)
- [8] They support this claim by commenting that: — SemiAnalysis Twitter (2026-05-20)
- [9] Specifically, in a section called: Our AI Compute Infrastructure Advantage and Growth Strategy — SemiAnalysis Twitter (2026-05-20)
- [10] SpaceX IPO Filing 'Aspirational,' Says Piper Sandler's Webster — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [11] Watch SpaceX IPO Filing 'Aspirational,' Says Piper Sandler's Webster — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [12] SpaceX's IPO Is a Wild Bet on the Gnarly Physical Future of AI - Business Insider — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [13] SpaceX IPO bets $2 trillion on Musk's ambitious rockets-to-AI vision — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [14] Goldman Sachs set to be named lead left underwriter for SpaceX ... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [15] Analysts: Mega-IPOs could signal market top as SpaceX preps float — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [16] Anthropic In Talks to Raise $30 Billion at $900 Billion Valuation - Bloomberg — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [17] Anthropic Raising $30 Billion More as AI Labs Absorb Majority of VC Funding — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [18] Sources: Anthropic potential $900B+ valuation round could happen within 2 weeks — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [19] Anthropic weighs raising funds at $900B valuation, topping OpenAI — reactive:anthropic-rapid-ascent
- [20] Anthropic boasts revenue run rate of $30 billion as the Claude developer expands its partnership with Google and Broadcom - Sherwood News — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [21] Anthropic nears first quarterly profit, pays SpaceX $1.25B monthly — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [22] Anthropic expands partnership with Google and Broadcom for ... — reactive:anthropic-rapid-ascent
- [23] Broadcom to Supply AI Chips to Google, Computing Capacity ... - WSJ — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [24] Anthropic in chips deals with Google and Broadcom worth hundreds of billions (3,5GW of capacity) : r/hardware — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [25] Amazon $33 Billion Anthropic Deal And The Limits Of AI Infrastructure — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [26] Google's Massive Anthropic Cloud Deal: The Hidden Winner in the ... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [27] SpaceX files plans for million-satellite orbital data center constellation - SpaceNews — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [28] SpaceX seeks FCC nod for solar-powered satellite data centers for AI — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [29] SpaceX Files FCC Application for Million-Satellite Orbital Data Center — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [30] [PDF] DA 26-113 Released - Federal Communications Commission — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [31] [PDF] DA-26-36A1.pdf - Federal Communications Commission — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [32] Anthropic to consider using SpaceX orbital data center satellites - SpaceNews — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [33] Report: Google and SpaceX in talks to put data centers into orbit | TechCrunch — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [34] SpaceX, Google Explore Orbital Data Center Deal; Space Stocks Jump | Investor's Business Daily — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [35] SpaceX, Google in orbital data center talks: Report — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [36] Spacex and Google partner for orbital data centers - Facebook — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [37] Google, SpaceX in talks to launch orbital data centers ... - Reddit — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [38] SpaceX IPO: Google Partnership Talks Over Orbital Data Centers Bolster $2 Trillion Valuation Goal — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [39] Orbital Data Center Race 2026 | Introl Blog — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [40] SpaceX Warns AI Space Data Centers May Not Pay Off - Technology Org — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [41] SpaceX IPO gives Musk sweeping power and curbs shareholder rights — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [42] Top IPO, Weak Governance — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [43] How Elon Musk will increase his power through the SpaceX IPO — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [44] Elon Musk's Plan to Keep Complete Control of SpaceX After Its Public — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [45] Elon Musk's Unprecedented Control at SpaceX | Office of the New ... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [46] SpaceX to keep Elon Musk as CEO, CTO, and chairman after IPO, with 79% voting control — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [47] Elon Musk's xAI is draining SpaceX's cash, with little to show for it | Morningstar — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [48] The Grok maker's losses are accelerating, as SpaceX's IPO pulls ... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [49] The Grok maker's losses are accelerating, as SpaceX's IPO pulls ... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [50] xAI burned $6.4B last year — SpaceX's IPO filing shows why the ... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [51] Grok Could Undermine SpaceX IPO - 24/7 Wall St. — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [52] Elon Musk on data centers in orbit: “SpaceX will be doing this” - Ars Technica — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [53] New Compute Partnership with Anthropic - xAI — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [54] SpaceX files plans for million-satellite orbital data center constellation — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [55] 'Financials look reckless': Lifting the xAI hood in the SpaceX IPO — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [56] The Grok maker's losses are accelerating, as SpaceX's IPO pulls ... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [57] Watch out for hidden AI bets and rising concentration risk ... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [58] ‘Financials Look Reckless’: Lifting xAI’s Hood in the SpaceX IPO | Morningstar — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [59] Anthropic nears first quarterly profit, agrees to pay SpaceX ... - Reuters — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [60] @olveraruize @mureytasroc @gbrl_dick **Yep, spot on.** Anthropic signed a deal with xAI/SpaceX for *all* of Colossus 1's... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute (2026-05-21)
- [61] @EkongGodson @elonmusk @AnthropicAI @SpaceX Yes, per SpaceX’s S-1 IPO filing released today: Anthropic agreed to pay Spa... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute (2026-05-20)
- [62] @Wwit314 @jeffborack @SawyerMerritt @SpaceX **Correct.** Per SpaceX's S-1 filing, the $1.25B/month deal (through May 202... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute (2026-05-20)
- [63] @shoughtonjr @JaguarAnalytics **Yes, the Anthropic cloud services deal (signed May 2026) changes the picture substantial... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute (2026-05-20)
- [64] @omoagberi @yabaleftonline **Sure!** This is straight from SpaceX’s recent S-1 IPO filing. — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute (2026-05-20)
- [65] @CDLCHQ @elonmusk @AnthropicAI @SpaceX Spot on. The shift to scalable compute as the core advantage is real—models are c... — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute (2026-05-20)
- [66] Grok Is Gaining on ChatGPT and Gemini. How It Got There Isn't Pretty. — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute
- [67] Will data centers in space work? Elon Musk says yes - NPR — reactive:spacex-s1-anthropic-compute