Elon Musk called Anthropic ‘evil’ 3 months ago. Now he’s taking $4 billion to become its data landlord


Three months ago, Elon Musk wrote on X that Anthropic was “evil,” “misanthropic,” and that the AI lab hated Western civilization. On Wednesday, he leased Anthropic one of his most valuable assets: the world’s biggest supercomputer.

But Anthropic-lovers shouldn’t bask too long in Musk’s newfound praise (even if he did decide that “nobody set off my evil detector” ). The deal has little to do with them as a company, analysts told Fortune, and everything to do with an upcoming prospectus.

SpaceX is expected to begin its public roadshow next month, with a confidential S-1 filed April 1 targeting a valuation between $1.75 trillion and $2 trillion. Wednesday’s announcement—paired with Musk’s dissolution of his AI company xAI into SpaceX (to make SpaceXAi)—gives the IPO something it didn’t have a week ago: a marquee AI customer for a credible cloud-infrastructure business.

According to estimates from Antoine Chkaiban, an analyst at New Street Research, the Anthropic deal will generate $3 billion to $4 billion in annual revenue for SpaceX, with more than $2.5 billion in cash profit. The margins seem extreme, but that’s because the data center is already built: the fixed capital expense is sunk, and the only meaningful operating cost is electricity plus the relatively minimal costs of staffing the place.

“He’s not going to want multiple billions of dollars of GPUs sitting idle,” Chkaiban told Fortune. “It’s a very good business decision.”

And, it seems, the start of Elon Musk’s transition from seeking to be a frontrunner in the model race, to being the landlord of AI.

“He who controls the data center, really does control the application of artificial intelligence right now,”  Andrew Moore, the former head of Google Cloud AI and now CEO of defense AI startup Lovelace AI, told Fortune. “So, yeah, I think both sides of this wedding of convenience will be a little stressed out by it.”

The hyperscaler pivot

Colossus 1 contains roughly 220,000 Nvidia GPUs and was built in 2024 to train Grok, Musk’s AI assistant. But Grok hasn’t filled it. Chkaiban estimates Grok generates less than $1 billion in annualized revenue; Anthropic is on track for more than $40 billion. The disparity is the deal. Musk has too much compute and Grok–despite endless “ask Grok” inquiries on X–can’t fill it; Anthropic has too many users and not enough compute. Leasing Colossus 1 to Anthropic funds the gap.

But it also lets Musk skip a step. The biggest cost line for any of the frontier AI labs is the 30%-plus margin paid to AWS, Microsoft Azure, or Google Cloud for compute. SpaceX captures those margins of the hyperscalers instead of paying it in stressful debt deals, like the AI labs.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *