SpaceX–Reflection AI $6.3B compute deal at Colossus 2
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SpaceX–Reflection AI $6.3B compute deal at Colossus 2

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Signals

Strategic Overview

  • 01.
    SpaceX signed a compute-leasing deal with open-source AI lab Reflection AI worth up to $6.3 billion, giving Reflection access to Nvidia GB300 chips at the Colossus 2 data center near Memphis, Tennessee.
  • 02.
    Reflection AI pays $150 million per month starting July 1, 2026, running through 2029, totaling roughly $6.3 billion if the agreement runs its full course.
  • 03.
    The arrangement is the third major cloud-style compute lease SpaceX has signed at its Colossus data centers, following deals with Anthropic and Google.
  • 04.
    Reflection AI was founded in 2024 by two former Google DeepMind researchers and is valued at $25 billion, backed by Nvidia, which also supplies the GB300 GPUs being leased.

Deep Analysis

The AWS of AI Compute: Follow the Money

The AWS of AI Compute: Follow the Money
Monthly compute-lease revenue to SpaceX by customer: Anthropic $1.25B, Google $920M, and now Reflection AI $150M.

Strip away the names and a clearer business emerges: SpaceX is quietly running a multi-tenant AI cloud, and Reflection is its third tenant. The monthly rents tell the story. Anthropic holds exclusive access to all of Colossus 1 at $1.25 billion per month [4]. Google signed on to pay $920 million per month for roughly 110,000 GPUs from October 2026 through June 2029 [6]. Now Reflection AI commits $150 million per month from July 2026 through 2029 for GB300 capacity at Colossus 2 [3]. Stacked together, SpaceX's combined compute revenue runs to roughly $2.17 billion per month — on the order of $26 billion a year [8]. That is the silent pivot: infrastructure SpaceX originally built to train Grok for its xAI unit is now a merchant cloud line serving the very labs xAI competes with. CNBC's framing captured it bluntly — Colossus is becoming its own business line rather than internal plumbing.

An Open-Weight Lab Bets $6.3B Before Shipping a Public Model

What is genuinely unusual is the buyer. Reflection AI, founded in 2024 by two former Google DeepMind researchers and valued at $25 billion [1], has committed up to $6.3 billion to compute before shipping a single public model. The bet is a positioning bet. Reflection calls this one of the largest announced open AI infrastructure commitments to date [2], and the timing is deliberate: open-weight models gained fresh momentum after the U.S. government's ban of Anthropic's closed models, opening a lane for a domestic, open answer to DeepSeek [2]. The company's own pitch is that nations and enterprises increasingly distrust depending solely on closed models, and that 'more compute means more runway to build the world's best open models at scale' [2]. In this frame, locking in scarce GB300 capacity is not the reward for success — it is the precondition for it.

Why Compute Became the Currency

The deal only makes sense against the backdrop of GPU scarcity. Advanced Nvidia chips remain the single biggest constraint on training and serving frontier models, so labs pay to lock in long-term capacity and providers monetize the shortage. Gartner's Arun Chandrasekaran frames compute as 'still the biggest constraint and source of advantage in frontier AI,' with access to it a 'key differentiator for AI innovation' [5]. Forrester's William McKeon-White reads SpaceX's move as opportunistic and rational, calling compute leasing 'one of the immediate growth areas for SpaceX through their xAI unit' [5]. Nvidia sits at the center of the flywheel as both the supplier of the GB300s being leased and a backer of Reflection itself [3]— a dual role that powers the deal and, as the next section shows, also fuels the skepticism around it.

The Skeptics' Read: Circular Financing and a 90-Day Trapdoor

Not everyone buys the flywheel narrative. The deal's structure leaves a notable gap between headline and reality: either party may terminate with 90 days' notice after an initial three-month period, which guarantees SpaceX only its first quarter — roughly $450 million — while the full $6.3 billion is contingent on the agreement running all the way through 2029 [3]. That short cancellation window is the load-bearing detail most coverage buried. Community reception has been markedly more cynical than the press releases, with the dominant frame being one of 'circular financing' — Nvidia backs Reflection, Reflection rents SpaceX compute, SpaceX buys Nvidia chips — alongside open doubts about whether a startup that has raised a fraction of $6.3 billion can actually cover the bill. A more sympathetic counter-read circulating in those same discussions holds that Nvidia bankrolling a domestic open-source lab is a rational strategic hedge in the post-DeepSeek landscape, not a shell game. The reported pressure on SPCX stock around the announcement, amid a separate large bond sale, only sharpened the question of how much of this revenue is durable [7].

Historical Context

2024
Reflection AI is founded by former Google DeepMind researchers Misha Laskin and Ioannis Antonoglou.
2026-01
The Colossus 2 data center comes online near Memphis.
2026-05
Anthropic secures exclusive access to all of Colossus 1 at $1.25 billion per month through May 2029.
2026-06-05
Google agrees to pay SpaceX $920 million per month for roughly 110,000 GPUs from October 2026 through June 2029.
2026-06-22
SpaceX signs its third major compute deal, leasing Colossus 2 GB300 capacity to Reflection AI for up to $6.3 billion.

Power Map

Key Players
Subject

SpaceX–Reflection AI $6.3B compute deal at Colossus 2

SP

SpaceX (xAI unit)

Compute provider leasing Nvidia GB300 capacity at Colossus 2, transitioning into an AI cloud vendor that monetizes infrastructure originally built for Grok and xAI.

RE

Reflection AI

Open-weight AI lab and customer, valued at $25 billion and backed by Nvidia; this is its first large compute agreement to scale frontier open models.

MI

Misha Laskin & Ioannis Antonoglou

Co-founders of Reflection AI and veteran former Google DeepMind researchers.

NV

Nvidia

Chip supplier of the scarce GB300 GPUs being leased and a backer of Reflection AI, placing it on both sides of the transaction.

AN

Anthropic

SpaceX's largest compute customer, with exclusive access to Colossus 1 at $1.25 billion per month.

GO

Google

SpaceX compute customer paying $920 million per month from October 2026 through June 2029 for roughly 110,000 GPUs.

Fact Check

8 cited
  1. [1] SpaceX leases AI data center compute to Reflection AI in deal worth up to $6.3 billion — CNBC
  2. [2] SpaceX inks compute deal with Reflection AI, an open-source AI lab — Yahoo Finance
  3. [3] SpaceX secures $6.3bn compute capacity deal from AI startup Reflection — DataCenterDynamics
  4. [4] SpaceX confirms third massive compute deal at Colossus in Memphis — Teslarati
  5. [5] SpaceX signs compute deal with open-source model provider — AI Business
  6. [6] Google will pay SpaceX $920M per month for compute — TechCrunch
  7. [7] SPCX on track for worst day since Nasdaq debut — Yahoo Finance
  8. [8] SpaceX-Google data centre deal underscores compute revenue surge — IBTimes UK

Source Articles

Top 5

THE SIGNAL.

Analysts

"Compute remains the biggest constraint and source of advantage in frontier AI, which is why leading labs are racing to lock in long-term infrastructure access as a key differentiator."

Arun Chandrasekaran
Analyst, Gartner

"Compute leasing through the xAI unit is one of SpaceX's most immediate growth areas, and funding open-source labs supports the broader commonization of models with future payoffs."

William McKeon-White
Analyst, Forrester

"Open source is increasingly important as nations and enterprises recognize the risk of depending solely on closed models, and more compute means more runway to build the best open models at scale."

Reflection AI spokesperson
Reflection AI
The Crowd

"SpaceX has signed a $6.3 billion dollar compute deal with Reflection. Reflection will gain immediate access to GB300s to train open source models, and will pay SpaceX $150 million per month beginning July 1, 2026, through 2029, according to materials viewed by CNBC."

@@AndrewCurran_660

"interesting that Reflection is open-sourced, has only raised $2B to date. I expect to see a new fundraising announcement come from them soon. There is a distinct possibility that securing compute fast is the precursor and bottleneck to securing large funding. SpaceX may have"

@@aaronburnett96

"SpaceX just signed a $6.3 billion compute deal with AI startup Reflection for capacity at Colossus 2 in Memphis. The deal runs through 2029 at $150 million per month. Reflection is positioning itself as America's open-source answer to DeepSeek. Founded in 2024 by two former"

@@TFTC2137

"SpaceX signs computing power deal with open-source AI startup Reflection worth up to $6.3 billion"

@u/Boston-Bets1800
Broadcast
Reflection deal suggests SpaceX's Colossus could become its own business line

Reflection deal suggests SpaceX's Colossus could become its own business line

Reflection AI Locks $6.3B Compute Deal With SpaceX

Reflection AI Locks $6.3B Compute Deal With SpaceX