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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
5APR

Stark closes €500m above its own ask

3 min read
19:51UTC

Stark Defence closed a €500m round at above €3.5bn on 23 June, led by Sequoia and Peter Thiel's Founders Fund, with 80% earmarked for factories.

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Key takeaway

Stark raised €500m at above €3.5bn with no volume production yet, priced on the option to build.

Stark Defence closed a €500 million round at a valuation above €3.5 billion on 23 June, above the €300 million to €500 million it had been seeking three days earlier 1. Stark is a Berlin-based maker of drones and loitering munitions. Sequoia Capital and Peter Thiel's Founders Fund led the round, with the NATO Innovation Fund and roughly fifty other investors alongside. More than 80% of the capital is earmarked for manufacturing, with new production lines planned across Germany, the UK and Ukraine.

The firm now sits on a German framework contract worth up to €2.8 billion, far above the €270 million call-off booked in the spring . Its Virtus loitering munition, the company's investors say, assembles in about ten minutes.

Investors priced the round above Stark's own ask while the company still has no volume production behind it. A Bundeswehr framework slot is being treated as collateral for a pre-revenue mark, the same option-to-produce bet running through Anduril and Helsing. If the German, British and Ukrainian lines slip, the €3.5 billion valuation stays untested by a single delivered unit.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Stark Defence is a German company, founded only in 2024, that makes an autonomous flying bomb called Virtus, which finds and strikes a target on its own before detonating. On 23 June it raised €500 million from investors, at a value of more than €3.5 billion, roughly what a mid-sized listed company might be worth, despite Stark not yet proving it can build these weapons in large numbers. The money came from well-known venture capital firms, including Sequoia Capital and Peter Thiel's Founders Fund, plus NATO's own investment arm and around fifty other backers. More than 80% of it is earmarked for building factories in Germany, Britain and Ukraine, rather than for research.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Stark's valuation rests on a structural feature of German defence procurement: framework contracts like the Bundeswehr's up-to-€2.8 billion Virtus agreement set a ceiling and a supplier list, but individual call-off orders, not the ceiling, are what actually fund production, and Berlin has not disclosed how much of that ceiling is contracted versus optional.

Investors including Sequoia and Founders Fund are pricing Stark, Anduril and Helsing alike on the assumption that Ukraine-honed autonomous-strike demand will keep converting European framework ceilings into real orders, a bet that has not yet been tested by a full economic cycle.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If the Bundeswehr's Virtus framework converts to call-off orders at a pace closer to the €270 million already booked than the €2.8 billion ceiling, Stark's €3.5 billion valuation would be priced well ahead of realised revenue.

  • Precedent

    Sequoia and Founders Fund backing a pre-volume European defence manufacturer at this scale is likely to draw comparable follow-on rounds for Anduril and Helsing, priced on the same option-to-produce logic.

First Reported In

Update #14 · UK's £5bn drone bet follows Healey's exit

Air Street Capital· 5 Jul 2026
Read original
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