Silicon Valley-backed defense firms face growing pains after hot streak

Silicon Valley-backed defense firms face growing pains after hot streak



US defense technology companies have roughly doubled their share of Pentagon contracts over the past year, but they face growing pains as they try to evolve from hot startups into heavyweights capable of building weapons at scale. Valuations for unlisted firms developing everything from unmanned “wingman” fighter jets, drone boats and AI-driven autonomous software have surged this year, alongside a rise in small Pentagon contracts, as the success of drones in Russia’s war on Ukraine has intensified interest in next-generation weapons.

For instance, drone boat manufacturer Saronic Technologies, which is building a shipyard in Louisiana, was valued at $4 billion in February. Anduril Industries, the drone and autonomous weapons startup led by Palmer Luckey, doubled its valuation to $30 billion in June. And in a funding round last month, radars and sensors company Chaos Industries doubled its valuation to $4.5 billion.

Now, the Silicon Valley-backed companies face a bigger challenge: moving beyond research and prototype contracts to producing weapons at scale and competing with established defense firms, according to interviews and speeches by more than a dozen industry executives at this weekend’s Reagan National Defense Forum in Simi Valley, California. “The defense tech space is booming, there are many people bringing commercial innovation to the defense area,” said Christopher Calio, CEO of RTX, the defense giant behind the Patriot missile defense system and the engine that powers the F-35 fighter jet.

“I will say this, it’s one thing to design and innovate. It’s another thing to build a prototype, and then it’s an entirely different ball game to then scale manufacturing,” Calio added.

Silicon Valley gets larger slice of Pentagon pie

Defense startups captured 1.3% of Pentagon contracts to defense firms in the first three quarters of this year, up from 0.6% a year earlier, according to data provided to Reuters by Govini, a Virginia-based defense software company. Meanwhile, the big defense “primes”, which include Boeing , Lockheed Martin, RTX and Northrop Grumman , held steady at 92% of Pentagon contracts. European defense firms’ share slipped to 6.6% from 7.4%.