Start-up company Cursor, which holds a central position in the AI Programming sector, recently faced obstacles in seeking a new round of financing worth several billion dollars. Its expected valuation of 50 billion USD has deterred several later-stage technology investment institutions. Previously, SpaceX was rumored to be interested in acquiring the company for 60 billion USD. However, during its recent intensive engagement with top global investors, several large funds, including Iconiq, have clearly expressed their refusal.

The core reason for the cooling in financing is that leading global capital has already completed its initial "alignment" in the AI field. According to insiders, most institutions with substantial funding capabilities have already invested billions of dollars in OpenAI and Anthropic. Particularly, Anthropic's Claude Code has shown stronger growth, leading investors to doubt whether Cursor can break through in a highly concentrated competitive environment. A fund manager who recently met with Cursor's senior management admitted that, facing rapid technological iterations and expansion by major players in the field, market sentiment has shifted from aggressive expansion to cautious defense.

The current financing logic in the AI industry is undergoing significant changes. As tools such as Claude Code rise quickly under the support of model giants, the survival space for independent programming plugins is being squeezed. Investors' hesitation about Cursor's 50 billion USD valuation not only reflects concerns about the risk resistance capability of single vertical tools but also indicates that the AI programming market has entered the second half of resource integration, with capital beginning to shift towards platform-type giants with underlying model capabilities.