Elon Musk announced on Monday that SpaceX will acquire xAI in an all-stock merger valued at $1.25 trillion. Analysts describe the transaction as a bailout for the AI startup, which loses roughly $1 billion per month. Musk cited the need to build AI data centers in space as the reason for the deal.
Internal documents reveal xAI’s financial struggles. The company reported a net loss of $1.46 billion in the September 2025 quarter, an increase from the $1 billion loss in the first quarter of the year. Quarterly revenue stood at $107 million during that period. Over the first nine months of 2025, xAI burned through $7.8 billion in cash. These figures highlight the startup’s high operational costs amid limited income streams compared to established AI competitors.
SpaceX presents a contrasting financial profile. According to Reuters, the company generated about $8 billion in profit from an estimated $15-16 billion in revenue last year. Starlink, SpaceX’s satellite internet service, saw its subscriber base double over the same timeframe. SpaceX also secures billions in contracts from NASA and the Department of Defense, supporting its launch and satellite operations.
Musk explained the merger’s purpose during the announcement. He stated that “within two to three years, space will become the lowest-cost way to deliver generative AI compute.” This vision involves constructing AI data centers in orbit, leveraging SpaceX’s rocket capabilities to deploy the necessary infrastructure.
Technical experts point to substantial engineering obstacles. SpaceX filed with the FCC for up to 1 million orbital data center satellites. Analysts at MoffettNathanson calculated that maintaining a constellation with five-year lifespans would demand approximately 200,000 launches per year. They described the required capital investment as “simply enormous.”
Cooling systems pose a major challenge in the vacuum of space, where heat dissipation occurs solely through radiation. One engineering analysis determined that rejecting 1 gigawatt of waste heat from such data centers would necessitate radiators over 14,000 times larger than the current capacity of the International Space Station. Musk has referenced space’s natural cold temperatures as a potential benefit, but these radiative requirements complicate implementation.
Computing hardware faces additional risks from space radiation. Protection demands either heavy shielding to block cosmic rays and solar particles or advanced error-correcting systems to maintain data integrity during operations.
The merger coincides with SpaceX’s preparations for a public offering as early as June 2026, which could raise $50 billion. Analysts express concerns that integrating xAI’s ongoing losses and associated regulatory issues may alter the attractiveness of the IPO.
Michael Sobel, an investor whose firm purchases secondary stakes in private companies, shared insights with The Information. He noted that SpaceX shareholders have voiced reservations about the deal. “If it were a straightforward SpaceX IPO, excitement would be high,” Sobel said. “However, with a merger of multiple companies, there’s curiosity and eagerness, and while most investors trust Musk, there’s a sense of hesitation.”
Swapnil Amin, a former Tesla director, framed the transaction in terms of capital structure. He observed that “xAI burns $1 B/month. It can’t IPO alone—not when OpenAI is raising $100 B at $830 B with 10x the revenue. So Musk did what he always does. He restructured the capital stack.”





