Replit’s CEO Amjad Masad says he doesn’t want to sell his AI coding company, even as rival Cursor is reportedly being bought by SpaceX for a massive $60 billion. The statement came at a major tech event in San Francisco where everyone wanted to know if Replit would follow suit.
The timing of this announcement is fascinating. While most startup founders dream of billion-dollar exits, Masad is taking the opposite approach just as his biggest competitor lands one of the largest tech deals ever.
Going Against the Grain
Both Replit and Cursor help people write code using AI, making them direct competitors in one of tech’s hottest markets. Cursor’s rumored $60 billion price tag from SpaceX shows just how valuable these AI coding tools have become. For context, that’s more than many Fortune 500 companies are worth.
Masad’s reluctance to sell suggests he believes Replit can build something even bigger on its own. This is a bold bet in an industry where most founders cash out when offered life-changing money. It also hints that the AI coding market might be even more valuable than the already astronomical numbers suggest.
Replit has been building tools that let anyone code using simple English commands, competing directly with Cursor’s similar approach. Both companies are racing to make programming accessible to millions of people who never learned traditional coding.
What’s Next
If Cursor’s deal goes through, it will put enormous pressure on Replit to prove it made the right choice by staying independent. The competition between these AI coding platforms is just getting started, and now one has SpaceX’s resources behind it.


