Oppenheimer has increased its one-year price objective for SpaceX to $250, up from $190, attributing the move mainly to improved revenue visibility tied to the company's acquisition of Cursor and a broader assessment that SpaceX holds a competitive advantage across multiple layers of the artificial intelligence stack.
Analyst Timothy Horan said SpaceX "owns every layer of the AI stack, giving it cost and quality advantages," a description that encompasses compute, models, data and application layers. Horan identified Cursor as "a major component" of that stack and signaled expectations for further acquisitions to augment the companys AI capabilities.
The primary driver behind Oppenheimers higher price target was a revision to AI revenue projections. The firm raised its AI revenue estimate for the fourth quarter of 2026 to $8.75 billion from $4.75 billion, reflecting Horans updated view of Cursor's growth trajectory and its contribution to the business.
Horan estimated Cursor is currently operating at an annualized revenue run rate of $4 billion, a step up from $1 billion at year-end 2025, and forecast that Cursors run rate will reach $6 billion by year-end 2026. In addition to these near-term adjustments, Oppenheimer extended its discounted cash flow model out to 2040 to capture longer-term value.
Beyond the numerical revisions, Horan set out a strategic roadmap. He characterized Starship as both a launch moat and "a NASA-funded route to a lunar supply base," and identified terrestrial data centers and the rollout of TeraFab as nearer-term priorities. Orbital compute was singled out as a longer-term opportunity that could become material over time.
Oppenheimer acknowledged execution risk as the key downside factor but noted SpaceX's historical performance as a reason for confidence. The firm said SpaceX "excels in this," pointing to the company's track record as support for its view that management can deliver against the stages of the commercial plan.
The combination of upgraded AI revenue assumptions, a larger role for Cursor, an extended DCF horizon and a strategic emphasis spanning launch capabilities to terrestrial and orbital compute underpinned the move to a $250 price target.
Contextual note: The material above reflects Oppenheimers published changes in forecast and strategic assessment as described by the analyst and does not introduce additional financial figures or projections beyond those stated.