Musk Anthropic SpaceX GPU Deal: 5 Powerful Reasons This Threatens OpenAI
The Musk Anthropic SpaceX GPU deal is one of the most strategically calculated moves in the AI industry this year — and its ripple effects reach far beyond a simple infrastructure agreement.
Without any prior warning, Anthropic announced a partnership with SpaceX that grants full access to the Colossus 1 data centre in Memphis, Tennessee. On the surface, a rocket company and an AI safety lab seem like an unlikely pairing. Look a little closer, though, and the logic becomes difficult to argue with.
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What the Musk Anthropic SpaceX GPU Deal Actually Involves
Within one month of the agreement taking effect, Anthropic gains access to more than 300 megawatts of compute capacity — equivalent to over 220,000 NVIDIA GPUs, spanning H100, H200, and the latest GB200 architecture. That is not a marginal upgrade. It is a step-change in what Anthropic can realistically train and deploy.
Anthropic moved quickly on the news, raising Claude’s usage limits for subscribers almost immediately. The company has been candid about compute being its primary constraint, and this deal removes that ceiling in a meaningful way.
| Metric | Before Deal | After Deal |
|---|---|---|
| Available GPU count (approx.) | Limited leased cloud capacity | 220,000+ (H100, H200, GB200) |
| Additional power capacity | — | 300+ megawatts |
| Colossus 1 utilisation | Unused by Anthropic | Full facility access |
| Claude usage limits | Restricted | Raised for subscribers |

Why Musk’s Timing Is Hard to Ignore
Elon Musk has publicly and repeatedly attacked Anthropic in the past, accusing the company of being anti-human and hostile to Western values. That makes his swift reversal — after a single meeting with the Anthropic team — genuinely striking. His explanation was that the conversation did not trigger what he called his “evil detector.” Whether you find that reassuring or not, the about-face happened fast.
What makes this more interesting is the concurrent announcement that xAI would dissolve as an independent entity and be absorbed into SpaceX, rebranding as SpaceXAI. This was not a sudden decision — SpaceX had already acquired xAI back in February of this year in what internal documents, later reported by CNBC, described as the largest acquisition in corporate history. At the time, SpaceX was valued at roughly $1 trillion and xAI at $250 billion, creating a combined entity worth approximately $1.25 trillion.
The IPO Factor: SpaceX at $1.75 Trillion
Here is where the commercial logic sharpens considerably. According to reporting from Bloomberg and Reuters, SpaceX is targeting a valuation of $1.75 trillion ahead of an anticipated IPO around June of this year. Closing that gap from $1.25 trillion to $1.75 trillion in a matter of months requires a compelling narrative.
“Orbital AI compute” — the concept of deploying AI inference and training capacity in space — is precisely that kind of narrative. The Anthropic agreement itself references potential collaboration on gigawatt-scale orbital AI computing infrastructure. Whether that becomes a real product near-term is debatable. As a story for Wall Street ahead of a landmark IPO, it is well-constructed.
I think it is worth being clear-eyed here: the orbital compute angle is aspirational at this stage. Its primary function right now is to sharpen the SpaceX investment thesis, not to produce near-term revenue. That does not mean it lacks long-term merit, but investors should read that part of the announcement accordingly.

Colossus 1 Was Sitting Idle — and That Is the Real Story
The detail that makes this deal straightforward to understand from Musk’s perspective is utilisation rate. According to prior reporting from The Information, Grok’s training workloads were using only around 11% of Colossus 1’s available capacity. A facility of that scale, drawing enormous amounts of power and requiring continuous maintenance, cannot be justified at single-digit utilisation.
The solution is obvious: lease the excess capacity. Anthropic pays for what it uses, Musk generates revenue from infrastructure that would otherwise sit idle, and Grok’s training operations have already migrated to Colossus 2 anyway.
| Data Centre | GPU Count | Primary Purpose | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colossus 1 | 220,000+ (H100/H200/GB200) | Previously Grok training | Now leased to Anthropic |
| Colossus 2 | 550,000 (GB200/GB300) | Next-gen Grok training | Active, recently launched |
| Estimated hardware cost (Colossus 2) | — | — | ~$18 billion |
Colossus 2 launched earlier this year as the world’s first gigawatt-class supercomputing cluster, stacking 550,000 NVIDIA GB200 and GB300 GPUs at an estimated hardware cost of around $18 billion. With that scale of infrastructure now available, Colossus 1 has become a revenue asset rather than a core training resource.

What This Means for OpenAI
I will be direct: this arrangement is structured in a way that benefits Anthropic at OpenAI’s expense, and Musk knows it. He is locked in active litigation with OpenAI. Separately boosting his principal competitor — with cheaper, denser compute than OpenAI can easily access — achieves a competitive objective at the same time as generating commercial return.
Anthropic, for its part, has no meaningful downside. More compute, better pricing than public cloud, and the ability to accelerate Claude’s development at a pace that was previously out of reach.
The AI model market has become a relentless cycle of major releases. A new Claude version, then a new GPT iteration, then another Gemini update — the pace does not slow. In that environment, compute access is not just infrastructure. It is competitive position. Anthropic has just materially improved its competitive position.
The Competitive Landscape: Where Each Player Stands
| Company | Compute Position | Near-Term Priority | Key Risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| OpenAI | Microsoft Azure dependency, own hardware ambitions | GPT-5 series, Sora scaling | Cost of compute at scale |
| Anthropic | Musk-leased Colossus 1, 220,000 GPUs | Claude capability acceleration | Dependency on third-party infrastructure |
| xAI / SpaceXAI | Colossus 2, 550,000 GPUs | Next-gen Grok, IPO narrative | Model quality lagging behind OpenAI and Anthropic |
| Google DeepMind | TPU infrastructure, own silicon | Gemini Ultra series | Regulatory scrutiny |
What Grok’s Future Actually Looks Like
Grok has not distinguished itself as a frontier model in the way its compute infrastructure might suggest it should. The reality is that having the most powerful data centre in the world does not automatically produce the best model. Model research, training methodology, and data quality matter just as much.
With Grok’s operations now running on Colossus 2, the compute ceiling is essentially gone. The question is execution. If the SpaceXAI team can match the infrastructure investment with equivalent research quality, the next Grok release could be a meaningful step forward. If not, all the GPUs in the world will not change the outcome.
Key Takeaways
- The Musk Anthropic SpaceX GPU deal gives Anthropic access to 220,000+ GPUs through the Colossus 1 data centre in Memphis, representing over 300 megawatts of compute.
- xAI has not been dissolved — it was acquired by SpaceX in February and rebranded as SpaceXAI, with Grok training relocated to the new Colossus 2 facility.
- Colossus 1 was running at approximately 11% utilisation for Grok workloads; leasing it to Anthropic converts idle infrastructure into revenue.
- SpaceX is targeting a $1.75 trillion IPO valuation, and the orbital AI compute narrative — including this deal — forms part of that investment thesis.
- The deal creates direct competitive pressure on OpenAI by strengthening Anthropic’s position, at a time when Musk is actively pursuing litigation against OpenAI.
Reference URLs
- CNBC — xAI and SpaceX merge in the largest acquisition in history, valuing the combined entity at $1.25 trillion
- CNBC — Anthropic and SpaceX announce Colossus 1 compute deal including space-based AI development
- Reuters — SpaceX files confidentially for IPO targeting a valuation of over $1.75 trillion
- Forbes Australia — SpaceX gives Anthropic access to the Colossus supercomputer for AI training
- Yahoo Finance — Anthropic to rent all AI compute capacity at SpaceX’s Colossus 1 data centre
- Wired — Anthropic partners with SpaceX as the AI race turns to hardware infrastructure
- Silicon Republic — Anthropic joins forces with SpaceX for Colossus compute capacity
- Data Center Dynamics — Anthropic to use all of SpaceX-xAI’s Colossus 1 data centre compute
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