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Drones: Industry & Defence
15JUN

Mach hits $1.8B in fintech-backed round

3 min read
11:15UTC

Mach Industries closed a $300M Series C at a $1.8B valuation, quadrupling its value in a year, with a fintech fund and mainstream tech investors crossing into attack-drone equity.

TechnologyDeveloping

Mach Industries closed a $300M Series C at a $1.8B valuation on Monday 1 June, four times its level twelve months earlier 1. The round was co-led by Infinite Capital and Ribbit Capital, with Sequoia Capital, Khosla Ventures and Bedrock participating. Mach, a US defence-tech startup building low-cost strike drones and interceptors, simultaneously bought solid-rocket-motor firm Exquadrum for $50M.

The specialist rounds are already logged, including Anduril's $5bn and Helsing's $1.2bn , so the round's size is not the signal. Ribbit is a fintech fund; Sequoia and Khosla are mainstream technology investors. Generalist money crossing into attack-drone equity prices the category as ordinary venture tech rather than a government niche.

That repricing compresses the cost of capital across the cohort, but it carries a risk the specialist rounds did not. Mach's 4x step-up decouples valuation from revenue. If Pentagon order flow slows, valuations set on a mainstream-tech thesis correct faster than ones underwritten by defence specialists who price the procurement cycle into their models.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Mach Industries is a young American company building low-cost attack drones and missiles. On 1 June 2026, it raised $300 million from investors, including Sequoia Capital, which also backed Apple and Google early on, valuing the company at $1.8 billion. That is four times more than it was worth just a year ago. At the same time, it bought a company called Exquadrum for $50 million. Exquadrum makes the solid rocket motors that power the kinds of missiles Mach builds. Buying the supplier means Mach controls more of its own production chain and does not depend on outside companies for a critical component.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Mach's valuation acceleration from ~$450M (twelve months prior, implied by the 4x step-up from the $1.8B post-money) reflects two concurrent forces: the Pentagon's FY2027 defence budget request lifting drone and counter-drone allocation to $70B gave investors a visible government demand signal, and Anduril's Arsenal-1 factory announcement created competitive urgency for a production-scale rival.

Exquadrum's $50M acquisition solves a specific bottleneck: Mach's five-vehicle programme requires solid-rocket-motor supply that it previously sourced externally. Bringing propulsion in-house reduces single-source supply risk and makes the company's cost structure more predictable for the LRIP contract negotiations it will need to enter.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Ribbit Capital and Sequoia's participation in an attack-drone round will draw scrutiny from Congressional committees on investment in autonomous lethal systems, potentially triggering disclosure requirements for non-specialist VC firms in future defence rounds.

  • Opportunity

    Exquadrum integration gives Mach a credible proposition for Pentagon LRIP competitions where supply-chain independence is a scoring criterion, directly competitive with Kratos's Valkyrie LRIP negotiations.

First Reported In

Update #11 · Ukraine starts exporting the factory

Unmanned Airspace· 7 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
DroneShield / Australian C-UAS sector
DroneShield / Australian C-UAS sector
DroneShield is simultaneously embedded in a US prime's fielded kill chain, selected for the world's largest civil C-UAS deployment, and navigating an open ASIC probe with a first-strike AGM vote on record. Strengthening commercial fundamentals and an unsettled boardroom are running in parallel at exactly the moment US buyers weigh supplier stability.
Ukraine / combat-data exporters
Ukraine / combat-data exporters
Ukrainian firms entered Pentagon Drone Dominance Phase 2 alongside Skycutter (ID:3988), and Red Cat's formal Spetstechnoexport partnership (ID:3987) carries Black Widow to Japan. Combat-proven data is the export Ukraine can monetise while its domestic export ban blocks hardware sales to Gulf states spending millions per salvo on less-proven alternatives.
Anduril investors
Anduril investors
Bernstein Research's Douglas Harned placed the 27-times-revenue multiple in the context of enterprise-software platform primes: the buyer prices a future monopoly on the Lattice software layer, not 2026 earnings. The Helsing Flytrap result and Phase 1 shortfall are the first live tests of those assumptions since the $61 billion valuation closed.
Helsing / European defence-AI sector
Helsing / European defence-AI sector
Helsing's 88% GPS-denied hit rate at Pabrade is its first US Army validation credential, arriving alongside an $18 billion valuation and a Bundestag €1.46 billion framework. Nordic, Baltic, and Central European defence ministries now have a US-scored European alternative to reference in procurement without waiting for a US programme of record.
Pentagon / Defense Innovation Unit
Pentagon / Defense Innovation Unit
The DIU's own programme managers characterised the 43% acceptance rate as within the expected curve for a first-generation industrial ramp. Phase 2's tighter price caps and Chinese-component deadline signal the programme is accelerating supplier-quality selection, not retreating from the 300,000-drone target.
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark (host nation)
Denmark accepted Fire Point's Skrydstrup plant after committing to bilateral defence co-production at the B9 Nordic summit in May; the facility sits beside a Danish F-35 base, sharing security perimeters. NATO has published no legal guidance on whether hosting Ukrainian weapons production converts Denmark into a co-belligerent, leaving the host-state obligation unresolved.