Sunday 14 June, 2026
[email protected]
Resilience Media
  • News
    • Events
    • Interview
    • Startups
    • Venture
    • Weekly Digest
  • Resilience Conference
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • About
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Events
    • Interview
    • Startups
    • Venture
    • Weekly Digest
  • Resilience Conference
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • About
  • Guest Posts
    • Author a Post
  • Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
Resilience Media
No Result
View All Result

Is defence tech a ‘proper’ VC-backable vertical?

The world has changed, and so should how investors view the wider category of defence technology

Anton VerkhovodovbyAnton Verkhovodov
March 16, 2026
in Guest Posts, Venture
a bridge over a body of water with a statue in the background
Share on Linkedin

Several months ago, on a famous VC podcast, I heard an idea that I consider heresy: defence tech is not a real “vertical” or industry. I fundamentally disagree with this assessment. Defence tech is critical for Europe’s future — and it is a real vertical where investors of various profiles, including VC, can make money.

You Might Also Like

NATO Innovation Fund appoints Nur Özdemir as its newest partner

Molfar lands €1.5 million lead investment for small drone-detecting radar

As space gets more dangerous, resilience matters more than ever

The podcast made a number of strong arguments for why defence tech is not a vertical. According to this view, venture capitalists spraying capital into defence are falling for a hyped-up category error and walking into a financial trap. It sounded clever on a podcast. But it relies on a mental model that was cracked in 2022 and then again at the 2025 Munich Security Conference.

The podcasters made a few claims:

  • Defence isn’t a market; it’s a sales channel monopsony trained on the government.
  • Defence contracting is a brutal “winner-take-all” arena. You win a decades-long Program of Record monopoly, or you get $0.
  • Hardware is hard. Defence requires asset-heavy manufacturing, yet “tourist” VCs mistakenly price these industrial companies like 90%-margin B2B SaaS startups.

I agree with some of this skepticism. Selling in defence is not trivial. Hardware is indeed hard and more expensive to build than SaaS. And defence tech companies should not be priced on SaaS hype multiples.

But does this really disqualify defence tech from being a “proper” vertical — or from being eligible for VC funding?

The truth is: the defence market has changed enormously in the past few years. And this outdated thinking framework must evolve.

Defence is not a monopsony. It is B2B2G. Everyone fixates on the B2G layer — the largest revenue, yes, but also the strictest regulations, the least flexibility, and direct competition from the primes.

But primes — primary integrators — need an entire ecosystem of suppliers to be able to sell to governments in the first place. It is the B2B part of the defence industry that is interesting for investors. Winning in the new defence tech reality is not only about becoming the next prime (or “neoprime”). Build great horizontal technology (say, autonomous navigation) and many integrators become your customers. That is a very different — and much more VC-compatible — business model.

And in the B2G sector, defence contracting is rapidly changing with new innovation acquisition programmes (e.g. Drone Dominance in the US) and contract structures (like Germany’s €900M procurement scheme). Ukraine is the most extreme live example, with its fast-track procedures and multiple acquisition vehicles: Army of Drones, MOD, direct-to-brigade, municipalities, charities.

Private capital is funding capabilities the military didn’t know it needed. When a startup proves its tech works in the field, it forces governments to launch new programmes for emerging OEMs. Some VCs bet on this change in procurement even before 2022 – and they win here, the FMV of their defence portfolio is a rocketship.

Hardware is definitely harder than SaaS. But it was hardware that gave birth to Silicon Valley. And the revolution in defence tech means hardware today is less of a hurdle than it was yesterday. Today, the true value-add is software-defined. Because this software layer is horizontal, there are numerous areas ripe for innovation. This means the market has space not just for a single national champion (the old hardware mentality), but for multiple winners per category.

Finally, the argument I like least: dual use. The tech built by new defence startups is mostly applicable beyond the battlefield. I find this the weakest card to play — not because it’s wrong, but because it concedes too much. In most cases, ‘defence’ is simply a go-to-market strategy, not a technological cage. The underlying tech—whether it’s autonomous navigation, advanced materials, or secure comms—has massive commercial upside. Companies building fundamentally great technology can pivot or expand into civil industries seamlessly.

Defence tech is a proper industry with lots more room for venture-scale outcome and multiple paths to success. If anything, we need more VC in defence tech! We need more bright engineers choosing this space and more entrepreneurs making Europe safer. They need to be funded.

Anton Verkhovodov is a partner at D3, a venture capital firm based in Kyiv, Ukraine.

Tags: D3D3 Venturesdefence techinvestingUkraine
Previous Post

Weekly Digest: Iranian ballistic missiles slip past US and UK defence systems in the Gulf while Ukraine’s startups deploy low-cost interceptors

Next Post

How Ukraine is transforming its battlefield data into a world-first AI training hub

Anton Verkhovodov

Anton Verkhovodov

Related News

NATO Innovation Fund appoints Nur Özdemir as its newest partner

NATO Innovation Fund appoints Nur Özdemir as its newest partner

byIngrid Lunden
June 12, 2026

The NATO Innovation Fund, the $1 billion+ investment vehicle for NATO to back innovative startups in defence and resilience tech,...

Molfar lands €1.5 million lead investment for small drone-detecting radar

Molfar lands €1.5 million lead investment for small drone-detecting radar

byJohn Biggs
June 5, 2026

Polish-Ukrainian defence technology company Molfar Defence Technologies has secured the first tranche of a €2 million funding round as it...

satellite flying on space

As space gets more dangerous, resilience matters more than ever

byRobert Brüll
May 6, 2026

In space, resilience must now take centre stage. Why? Because more and more, it is becoming impossible to prevent actions...

brown and black abstract painting

China’s quantum five-year plan is a wake-up call

byAndrew Turner
April 30, 2026

The UK’s quantum sector has recently been buoyed by a £2bn government commitment, a significant signal of intent to develop...

birds eye photography of concrete structure

Sovereign fuel: how the tactical edge is escaping the global oil crisis

byIvar Kruusenberg
April 29, 2026

Whenever global oil prices spike, conversation around the impact and reasons usually sticks to the big picture, whether countries have...

black and red street light

The UK is under attack from grey-zone warfare, and we are not ready for it

byHarry Mead
April 28, 2026

The UK is under attack, and we are not prepared. Earlier this month, Kensington Gardens was closed to the public...

UNIVITY raises €27 million to build a 5G satellite constellation that can expand European communication networks

UNIVITY raises €27 million to build a 5G satellite constellation that can expand European communication networks

byJohn Biggs
April 24, 2026

UNIVITY has raised €27 million to transition its space-based telecom infrastructure from a demonstration phase to an early industrial stage....

How to find the needle in the startup haystack in Ukraine: observations from an early-stage VC

How to find the needle in the startup haystack in Ukraine: observations from an early-stage VC

byLuke Smith
April 23, 2026

After an investor demo day in early 2022, Roman Sulzhyk, head of investment at early-stage venture capital firm Resist.UA, found...

Load More
Next Post
person on top of brown steel frame

How Ukraine is transforming its battlefield data into a world-first AI training hub

Interview: Granta Autonomy’s CEO on the future of drone warfare, NATO’s role in European peace

Interview: Granta Autonomy's CEO on the future of drone warfare, NATO's role in European peace

Most viewed

InVeris announces fats Drone, an integrated, multi-party drone flight simulator

Uforce raises $50M at a $1B+ valuation to build defence tech for Ukraine

Auterion, the drone software startup, eyes raising $200M at a $1.2B+ valuation

Palantir and Ukraine’s Brave1 have built a new AI “Dataroom”

Twentyfour Industries emerges from stealth with $11.8M for mass-produced drones

Senai exits stealth to help governments harness online video intelligence

Resilience Media is an independent publication covering the future of defence, security, and resilience. Our reporting focuses on emerging technologies, strategic threats, and the growing role of startups and investors in the defence of democracy.

  • About
  • News
  • Resilence Conference
    • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
    • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026
    • Resilience Conference 2026
  • Guest Posts
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Mission Statement & Code of Practice
  • Press

© 2026 Resilience Media

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • Events
  • Guest Posts
  • Interview
  • News
  • Resilience Conference London 2026
  • Resilience Conference Copenhagen 2026
  • Resilience Conference Warsaw 2026

© 2026 Resilience Media

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.