Elon Musk’s SpaceX Rebrands xAI to SpaceXAI for Orbital Computing Ahead of $1.75T IPO

SpaceX files SpaceXAI trademarks after folding xAI into SpaceX, with filings covering satellite data centers and AI cloud services.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX Rebrands xAI to SpaceXAI for Orbital Computing Ahead of $1.75T IPO

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence company xAI is being folded into SpaceX under a new brand, SpaceXAI, as the aerospace company expands its ambitions in artificial intelligence, satellite-based data centres and orbital computing infrastructure.

SpaceX has filed trademark applications for the wordmark “SpaceXAI,” according to reports citing filings with the United States Patent and Trademark Office. The filings describe services tied to satellite-based data centers, orbital computing, cloud computing, artificial intelligence software, model training, inference and AI workload management through satellite constellations and space-based platforms.

Source: X

Musk said xAI would be dissolved as a separate company and that AI products would operate under SpaceXAI. He also said the new AI unit would have its own logo. The rebrand follows SpaceX’s earlier acquisition of xAI and comes as the company prepares for a reported public listing that analysts have valued as high as $1.75 trillion.

The move also follows SpaceX’s major compute agreement with Anthropic, the developer of Claude. Under that deal, Anthropic will use capacity from SpaceX’s Colossus 1 supercomputer in Memphis, Tennessee, giving the AI company access to more than 300 megawatts of compute power.

SpaceXAI Trademark Points to Orbital Data Centers

The SpaceXAI trademark filings describe a broad AI and computing business that extends beyond software models. The listed services include satellite-based data center operations, edge computing systems in space, AI-powered data processing, cloud storage and platform services for machine learning workloads.

One filing also refers to telecommunications hardware, internet service provider services, satellite constellations, cloud storage and social networking. Those descriptions suggest SpaceXAI may combine parts of SpaceX, Starlink, X and xAI into a wider technology and infrastructure strategy.

SpaceX has already discussed plans for space-based computing systems. The company has said orbital compute could offer access to solar power and reduce the pressure placed on land, electricity grids and cooling systems used by large terrestrial data centers.

The concept remains technically difficult. Orbital data centers would require reliable launch economics, heat management, radiation protection, maintenance systems, communications links and rules for safe deployment at scale. SpaceX argues that its launch cadence, reusable rockets and satellite operations experience give it a rare position to attempt such projects.

Anthropic Deal Adds Revenue to Compute Strategy

The SpaceXAI rebrand came as SpaceX agreed to lease Colossus 1 capacity to Anthropic. The facility reportedly includes more than 220,000 Nvidia GPUs and over 300 megawatts of power capacity.

Anthropic said the additional compute will help support Claude, including higher usage limits for Claude Code and increased API capacity for Claude Opus models. The company has faced growing infrastructure demand as more users adopt its AI tools for coding, enterprise use and automation.

Concurrently, analysts estimate that the Anthropic deal could generate several billion dollars in annual revenue for SpaceX. Estimates have ranged from about $3 billion to more than $6 billion, depending on capacity pricing and contract structure.

The agreement positions SpaceX as more than a rocket and satellite company. By leasing large-scale AI compute, SpaceX is moving into an area currently dominated by hyperscale cloud providers such as Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud.

The deal also gives SpaceX a way to monetize infrastructure built for xAI. Rather than relying only on its own AI models to generate revenue, SpaceXAI may operate as a neocloud provider supplying compute capacity to outside AI firms.

IPO Plans Shape Broader SpaceX Strategy

The SpaceXAI brand arrives as investors watch reports of a potential SpaceX IPO. Market reports have placed the company’s possible valuation at about $1.75 trillion, with AI infrastructure, Starlink, launch services, and orbital computing all forming part of the wider growth narrative.

The AI rebrand may strengthen SpaceX’s public-market profile by linking its satellite network, supercomputing assets, and AI products under one structure. It also gives the company a clearer identity for services related to cloud computing, orbital data centres, and AI infrastructure.

The partnership with Anthropic also marks a change in tone between Musk and the AI company. Musk had previously criticized Anthropic in public posts, but later said he had met senior members of the team and was impressed by their competence and stated concern for safety.

Anthropic has also expressed interest in working with SpaceX on multiple gigawatts of orbital AI compute capacity. That proposal remains a future objective, while the Colossus 1 agreement gives Anthropic immediate access to terrestrial compute infrastructure.

Due to this move. Cathie Wood, chief executive of ARK Invest, has noted the Anthropic agreement could shift SpaceXAI from heavy Colossus-related losses toward profitability as a neocloud provider. In a post on X, Wood estimated the business could generate more than $5 billion to $6 billion in annual revenue, citing SpaceX’s move to monetise AI compute infrastructure.