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The Economic Times
The Economic Times

AI coding startup Cursor, courted by SpaceX, picks London as European hub

AI coding startup Cursor, which SpaceX has an option ​to buy for $60 billion, will ​open its European headquarters in London and hire some 200 ​staff, an executive told Reuters, as demand in the region grows for tools that automate software development.

Elon Musk's SpaceX, which is readying for a closely watched IPO this week, said in April ‌it had ⁠secured an ⁠option to either acquire code-generation startup Cursor for $60 billion later this year, or pay $10 billion for ​their new partnership, as it pushes deeper into the lucrative market for AI developer tools.

San ​Francisco-based Cursor chose London for its deep talent pool and access to multilingual workers, allowing the company to support multiple European markets from a single base, said ​Ismail Elmas, Cursor's senior vice president for EMEA.

London ⁠has Europe's ‌largest concentration of tech talent, and second-largest globally after San ​Francisco. Cursor is ​planning to open other smaller offices in Paris, Munich, Frankfurt, ⁠Amsterdam and Stockholm, Elmas said.

Cursor's business has scaled rapidly since ​its founding in 2022, with about $2.6 billion in annualised ​business-to-business revenue and enterprise sales growing sharply, according to company data shared with Reuters.

The company counts British Airways, BP, Nokia and Sanofi among its clients.

"Running the business out of the U.S. doesn't work. The European market has its own demands, and being in the region is important," Elmas said.

He added that the company ‌was seeing increasing demand from customers to keep data within the region, particularly among regulated industries concerned about privacy and compliance.

Elmas ​declined to comment ​on the SpaceX option.

The ⁠company is targeting roughly 200 staff in the EMEA region by the end of the year, up from around 70 to 80 employees now.

Cursor's software allows users ​to generate code by describing applications in natural language, helping companies speed up development and modernise legacy systems, a shift the company says can significantly increase developer output.

Cursor competes with products such as Microsoft-owned GitHub Copilot and offerings from OpenAI and Google, positioning itself as a "model-agnostic" platform that lets customers choose between different AI systems.

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