SpaceXAI Unveils New Logo After $1.25 Trillion xAI Absorption
Updated
Updated · TESLARATI · Jul 6
SpaceXAI Unveils New Logo After $1.25 Trillion xAI Absorption
3 articles · Updated · TESLARATI · Jul 6
Summary
SpaceXAI on July 6 revealed a new logo that folds the xAI letters into the SpaceX wordmark, formalizing xAI’s disappearance as a standalone brand.
The branding move completes a merger process that began with SpaceX’s February acquisition of xAI in a $1.25 trillion private deal and Musk’s May statement that xAI would be dissolved.
Musk has framed the combination around orbital AI infrastructure: SpaceX supplies rockets, Starlink and capital, while xAI brings Grok, X-linked data and Memphis supercomputing capacity of more than 220,000 Nvidia GPUs.
The tie-up also pairs xAI’s reported $2.5 billion losses on $250 million revenue with a more profitable SpaceX, which the report says generated about $8 billion profit on $15 billion revenue.
That leaves SpaceXAI pitching itself as an unusually broad future public-market story spanning launch, satellite internet, AI software, social media and supercomputing.
With experts calling orbital AI a '$2 trillion fantasy,' is SpaceX's massive AI gamble just a narrative to fuel its post-IPO valuation?
As Musk builds a 'sentient sun' in space, why does his AI empire rely on polluting data centers facing federal lawsuits on Earth?
SpaceXAI’s Historic $1.77 Trillion IPO: The Fall of xAI, Orbital Compute Ambitions, and the Future of AI Infrastructure
Overview
In July 2026, xAI was absorbed into SpaceX, leading to a rebrand as SpaceXAI and the unveiling of a new logo. This merger created a powerful new player in the global technology landscape, combining SpaceX’s space infrastructure with xAI’s AI expertise. SpaceXAI quickly outlined ambitious plans, focusing on launching 'AI compute satellites'—giant data centers in outer space. These satellites are set to revolutionize data processing and AI operations by providing decentralized, space-based computational power, with deployment scheduled to begin as early as 2028. This marks a bold new direction for both space and artificial intelligence industries.