SpaceX makes big money renting AI power to new tech firms
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SpaceX Cashes In: AI Startup Signs $6.3 Billion Deal for Data Center Power
A little-known AI company just struck a deal so massive it could reshape the future of artificial intelligence—and SpaceX is the unlikely kingpin behind it.
Reflection, a stealthy AI startup, inked a five-year, $6.3 billion contract with SpaceX, paying $150 million per month for access to the tech giant’s colossal data center, Colossus 2. The agreement runs until 2029—a timeline eerily similar to deals signed by deep-pocketed tech giants.
This isn’t SpaceX’s first foray into the AI gold rush. The company has been renting out its computing muscle for months, but this deal underscores a brutal truth: AI demand is outstripping supply, and companies are paying top dollar for the power to train their models.
The AI Gold Rush: Why SpaceX’s Data Centers Are the New Oil Wells
AI models don’t train themselves. They devour vast amounts of computing power, and with training costs soaring into the hundreds of millions, companies are willing to burn billions just to secure the hardware they need.
Reflection joins a growing roster of deep-pocketed clients scrambling for a piece of SpaceX’s Colossus 2, a facility so powerful it’s become the beating heart of the AI revolution.
But here’s the kicker: Is this pricing sustainable? As more players enter the market—with giants like Microsoft, Google, and Amazon still lurking—some experts warn that prices could tumble once competition heats up.
SpaceX’s Unlikely Empire: From Rockets to AI’s Bank
Most people associate SpaceX with rockets, Mars missions, and Elon Musk’s grand ambitions. But now, the company is quietly printing money by leasing out its data centers to the very companies fueling AI’s explosive growth.
This deal isn’t just about revenue—it’s a strategic power play. By dominating the AI compute market, SpaceX is positioning itself at the center of the next technological revolution, proving that even in the age of AI, firepower isn’t just about horsepower anymore.
For Reflection and others like it, the message is clear: If you want to build the future, you’ll need a seat at SpaceX’s table.