Microsoft Prepares for a Post-OpenAI Future — Cursor Goes to SpaceX, Inception Talks Underway
Microsoft is pursuing AI startup acquisitions and in-house model development to reduce its dependence on OpenAI. Cursor was snapped up by SpaceX for $60B, while Microsoft is in active negotiations with diffusion-based LLM startup Inception.

- Microsoft is hedging its OpenAI bet by pursuing AI acquisitions and building proprietary models by 2027
- SpaceX acquired Cursor for $60B; Microsoft is now in talks with diffusion-LLM startup Inception
Microsoft has poured over $100 billion into OpenAI and built out AI infrastructure to match. Now, it's quietly beginning to prepare for what comes after. A Reuters report from May 13 reveals a subtle but significant shift in Microsoft's AI strategy.
Microsoft is actively evaluating AI startup acquisitions while simultaneously building in-house AI model capabilities. The company is running a dual-track strategy — maintaining its OpenAI partnership while diversifying its dependencies.
Cursor — Lost to SpaceX First
Microsoft had been evaluating an acquisition of AI coding startup Cursor before pulling back, citing internal concerns and a mix of other factors. The outcome is clear: SpaceX moved first, agreeing on April 22 to acquire Cursor for $60 billion. While Microsoft stalled, the Musk ecosystem acted.
Microsoft already owns GitHub Copilot. Adding Cursor on top of Copilot in the AI coding tools market could have raised antitrust concerns from regulators. The regulatory environment is becoming a structural constraint that narrows Microsoft's M&A options.
Inception — Negotiations in Progress
Having missed out on Cursor, Microsoft pivoted to another target. The company is currently in negotiations with AI startup Inception, founded by Stanford professor Stefano Ermon. Inception develops diffusion-based large language models — a fundamentally different architectural approach from conventional transformer-based LLMs, differentiated by its speed and efficiency.
Microsoft's M12 venture fund already participated in Inception's $50 million seed round in November 2025. Reuters reports that a substantially larger deal is now being negotiated. Whether it's an acquisition or an investment — and at what size — has not been disclosed.
Why Microsoft Is Reducing Its OpenAI Dependence
The OpenAI partnership, which began in 2019, has been a core growth engine for Microsoft's Azure cloud business. However, as OpenAI has sharpened its independent commercial strategy and pursued direct monetization, the two companies' interests have begun to diverge. The more OpenAI serves enterprise clients directly, the more it dilutes revenue flowing through Microsoft Azure.
Microsoft is targeting the development of its own advanced models by 2027 — building a structural hedge for the post-OpenAI era, even as the $100 billion partnership remains in place.
Reuters
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Microsoft breaking up with OpenAI?
It's not a breakup — it's diversification. Microsoft is maintaining its OpenAI partnership while simultaneously building in-house capabilities and securing alternative AI sources. The company is targeting development of its own advanced models by 2027.
What exactly does Inception do?
Inception is an AI startup founded by Stanford professor Stefano Ermon that develops diffusion-based LLMs — a fundamentally different architecture from transformer-based models like GPT, with a focus on speed and efficiency. The company closed a $50 million seed round in November 2025 with participation from Microsoft's M12 venture fund.
Who ultimately acquired Cursor?
SpaceX. After Microsoft stepped back from its evaluation, SpaceX agreed on April 22 to acquire Cursor for $60 billion. The move is part of a broader push toward vertical integration in AI development alongside Musk's other ventures including xAI.
Was antitrust the real reason Microsoft walked away from Cursor?
Antitrust wasn't the only reason. Reuters cited only "internal concerns" without elaborating, while CNBC mentioned strategic considerations around AI tooling competitiveness. Antitrust risk was likely a contributing factor, but it would be an overstatement to call it the sole cause.
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