⚡ Key Takeaways

Lockheed Martin’s board authorised expanding Lockheed Martin Ventures from $400M to $1B on April 14, 2026 — the fund’s largest expansion since its 2007 founding. The fund has historically invested over $500M across 120+ companies, with 60+ portfolio firms maturing into Lockheed Martin suppliers and $750M in contracts flowing back to portfolio. Focus areas include quantum computing, autonomy and AI, directed energy, advanced materials, and microelectronics, with implicit extension to hypersonics and space.

Bottom Line: Defense-tech founders should run multi-prime competitive processes between Lockheed Martin Ventures, RTX Ventures, Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics, and Boeing’s HorizonX, and negotiate a defined supplier-onboarding pathway as part of any term sheet rather than accepting equity capital alone.

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🧭 Decision Radar

Relevance for Algeria
Low

The fund’s national-security framing limits direct accessibility for Algerian founders, but the dual-use trend in autonomy, AI, advanced materials, and microelectronics is informative for Algerian deep-tech startups considering international fundraising.
Infrastructure Ready?
Partial

Algeria has research capacity at CDTA and university labs in autonomy and microelectronics, but lacks the export-control and dual-use compliance infrastructure that defense-CVC engagement would require.
Skills Available?
Limited

Algerian deep-tech talent in autonomy, materials, and microelectronics exists but is largely concentrated in research institutions rather than operational startups; commercial-grade dual-use teams are scarce.
Action Timeline
12-24 months

Algerian deep-tech founders with international research partnerships should monitor European prime CVC mechanisms (BAE, Airbus DS, Leonardo) over the next 18 months as more accessible engagement pathways than U.S. defense CVC.
Key Stakeholders
Algerian deep-tech founders, CDTA researchers, ASF labelled startups, diaspora researchers in NATO countries
Decision Type
Educational

This article informs Algerian readers about the global defense-tech CVC landscape and its dual-use implications rather than requiring direct Algerian action.

Quick Take: Algerian deep-tech founders building in autonomy, AI, advanced materials, or microelectronics should track the prime-CVC expansion trend through 2026-2027 and evaluate European prime venture vehicles (BAE Systems, Airbus DS, Leonardo, Saab) as more accessible engagement options than U.S. defense CVC. Diaspora-led startups based in NATO countries are best positioned to engage Lockheed Martin Ventures directly. Domestic Algerian startups should focus on commercial dual-use market traction first, then evaluate defense pathways through international partners.

What Lockheed Authorised on April 14

On April 14, 2026, Lockheed Martin’s board authorised an increase in the capacity of Lockheed Martin Ventures from $400 million to $1 billion — a 2.5x scale-up that is the fund’s largest expansion since its 2007 founding with an initial $100 million commitment. CFO Evan Scott framed the rationale in his statement: “Our venture capital investments are a critical part of our overall strategy to develop and integrate the best technologies for national security.” That language is precise: the fund is positioned not as a pure financial vehicle but as an industrial integration engine that pulls dual-use technologies from independent startups into Lockheed Martin’s defense supply chain.

The fund’s stated focus areas under the expansion are quantum computing, autonomy and AI, directed energy, advanced materials, and microelectronics. Notably absent from the public framing — though clearly relevant given Lockheed Martin’s broader business — are hypersonics and space, both of which are areas where the prime contractor competes with defense-tech upstarts like Anduril, Shield AI, and a wave of newer space-launch and on-orbit servicing startups. The published focus list reads as a deliberate signal of where Lockheed Martin sees defensible technology gaps in its own internal R&D portfolio that startup acquisition or partnership can fill faster than building from scratch.

Historically, Lockheed Martin Ventures has invested over $500 million across more than 120 portfolio companies, with 25 added in the past two years alone. The most operationally relevant statistic is that more than 60 portfolio companies have matured into Lockheed Martin suppliers, generating $750 million in contracts flowing back from prime to portfolio. That conversion ratio — roughly half of all portfolio companies becoming actual revenue-generating suppliers — is dramatically higher than typical CVC portfolio outcomes and is the structural reason the board approved a 2.5x scale-up rather than a smaller incremental addition.

Why $1B Now: The Defense-Tech Capital Context

The expansion lands in the middle of an extraordinary defense-tech fundraising cycle. Disclosed defense-tech startup funding hit record levels through 2025, with Anduril, Shield AI, Saronic, Skydio, and a long tail of smaller companies absorbing billions in venture capital. Defense-tech captured the majority of all disclosed defense-related funding in the trailing twelve months, an inversion of the historical pattern where prime contractors dominated capital flows in the sector. The reversal puts traditional primes — Lockheed Martin, Raytheon (RTX), Northrop Grumman, General Dynamics, Boeing’s defense arm — in a structurally new position: they are no longer the only credible buyers of defense technology, and they are competing for talent and acquisition targets with venture-backed companies that operate at faster decision cycles and offer more aggressive equity packages.

A $1 billion CVC fund is Lockheed Martin’s structural answer to that competitive shift. With 25 new portfolio companies added in the past two years and the existing $400 million capacity nearing full deployment, the expansion provides dry powder to take meaningful positions in Series A and B rounds where defense-tech valuations have escalated rapidly. The fund’s documented 50 percent supplier-conversion ratio also gives Lockheed Martin a credible pitch to founders that conventional VC cannot match: equity capital plus a fast path to actual defense contracts at industrial scale, rather than just capital with a vague promise of “strategic value.”

The competitive backdrop matters for how founders evaluate the fund. RTX Ventures, Booz Allen’s Velocity portfolio, and the smaller defense-focused CVC vehicles at Northrop Grumman and General Dynamics are all active in the same deals. Founders pitching across multiple primes can credibly run competitive processes in 2026 in a way that was structurally impossible five years ago. The Lockheed Martin Ventures expansion both reflects and accelerates that shift.

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Three Signals Hidden in the Structure

Signal 1: Supplier conversion is now the primary CVC metric

The disclosure that more than 60 portfolio companies have become Lockheed Martin suppliers, generating $750 million in contracts back, is the operating disclosure that matters. Most CVC funds report deal count, IRR, or strategic alignment — vague metrics that founders cannot use to evaluate which CVC actually delivers value. Lockheed Martin Ventures has, intentionally or not, set a benchmark: roughly 50 percent of portfolio companies should mature into operating suppliers within five to seven years of investment. CVC funds that cannot point to a comparable conversion ratio are now structurally disadvantaged in the founder pitch process. Expect RTX, Northrop, and General Dynamics to start disclosing similar metrics within the next twelve months in response.

Signal 2: The check-size band is shifting up

The fund has not publicly disclosed expected check sizes under the expanded mandate, but the simple math implies a meaningful increase. Across roughly 25 new investments in the past two years on a $400M base, average commitments would have been $5-15 million per company. A $1B fund with similar pacing implies average check sizes of $15-25 million per company, which puts Lockheed Martin Ventures into the lead-investor range for Series A and B rounds rather than the participation-only check sizes typical of strategic CVC. Founders should expect the fund to ask for board observation seats, technology roadmap influence, and supply-chain integration as conditions of the larger checks. That is a meaningfully different deal structure from passive strategic CVC participation.

Signal 3: Dual-use is the new acquisition pipeline

Lockheed Martin’s framing of “national security” technologies extends well beyond traditional kinetic defense systems. Autonomy and AI, advanced materials, microelectronics, and quantum computing are all dual-use categories with substantial commercial markets in addition to defense applications. The expansion signals that Lockheed Martin views CVC as the primary scouting and integration mechanism for dual-use technologies that the company wants to integrate into both defense products and adjacent commercial businesses. Founders building dual-use startups should treat Lockheed Martin Ventures as a credible Series A or B partner with a defined path to defense procurement, rather than as a “defense pivot” option to consider only after commercial traction. The fund’s expansion changes the timing and structure of dual-use fundraising calculus.

What This Means for National-Security Founders

1. Prioritise the supplier-conversion path, not the IRR exit narrative

Founders pitching Lockheed Martin Ventures and similar prime-CVC vehicles should orient their narrative around the supplier-conversion path rather than financial-exit IRR. The fund’s documented success metric is not Series D markups; it is portfolio companies becoming operational suppliers generating Lockheed Martin contracts. Pitch decks that lead with “10x return potential” miss the structural value proposition. Pitch decks that lead with “this technology fills a documented gap in your existing platform integration roadmap” align with what the fund actually optimises for. The supplier-conversion path also produces founder outcomes that are typically better than the comparable VC-only exit, because acquirer-quality contracts are less dilutive than later-round financings.

2. Run a multi-prime competitive process before signing

The defense-tech CVC landscape now supports genuine competitive processes between Lockheed Martin Ventures, RTX Ventures, Northrop Grumman’s strategic capital arm, General Dynamics’ venture activity, and Boeing’s HorizonX. Founders who pitch only one prime are giving up significant valuation and structural leverage. The right process structure in 2026 is to run a six-to-eight-week multi-prime engagement, surface competitive interest, and negotiate term sheets in parallel. This is structurally different from the single-CVC negotiation pattern that characterised the sector five years ago, and founders who do not adapt the process will systematically receive worse terms than peers who do.

3. Demand a defined supplier-onboarding path before signing

The most valuable thing Lockheed Martin Ventures offers is the path from equity investment to supplier contract. The most common founder mistake is taking the equity check without negotiating a defined supplier-onboarding pathway as part of the deal. The right structure is to insist on a written technology integration plan, a named program-office sponsor, and a milestone-linked supplier-evaluation timeline as part of the term sheet. This converts the strategic value narrative into a contractual commitment. Founders who skip this step often find the equity capital arrives but the supplier contracts do not, which leaves them with an undervalued strategic CVC position and no operational uplift. The fund’s $750M historical contract-flow disclosure gives founders the leverage to ask for these commitments.

Regional Benchmarks and What Comes Next

The Lockheed Martin Ventures expansion sits inside a global defense-tech capital cycle that is increasingly multipolar. European primes — BAE Systems, Airbus Defence and Space, Leonardo, Saab — operate smaller CVC vehicles but are scaling them in response to the EU’s European Defence Fund and increased defense budgets across NATO members. In Asia, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Hanwha Defense, and a wave of Indian primes are building similar mechanisms. The Singapore government’s Defence Science and Technology Agency operates one of the most sophisticated dual-use capital programmes outside the U.S., with measurable supplier-conversion outcomes on a smaller portfolio base.

The realistic outlook for the next twelve to eighteen months is that defense-tech capital concentration will continue, prime CVC funds will scale further, and the founder fundraising calculus will increasingly favour startups that can credibly thread the dual-use needle — strong commercial market plus credible defense procurement path. Founders building purely commercial AI or robotics with vague defense applicability will find the bar to access prime CVC capital rising, while founders with documented defense use-cases and commercial traction will see escalating competitive interest from multiple primes simultaneously. The Lockheed Martin Ventures expansion is one data point in that broader shift, but it is the largest single CVC expansion since 2007 and sets the pace for what other primes will need to match.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does Lockheed Martin Ventures invest in and at what stage?

Lockheed Martin Ventures invests in startups across quantum computing, autonomy and AI, directed energy, advanced materials, and microelectronics, with the expansion announcement also implicitly extending to hypersonics and space. The fund typically participates in Series A and B rounds, but the expansion to $1 billion likely shifts average check sizes into the $15-25 million range per company, which positions the fund for lead-investor roles rather than purely strategic participation. Approximately half of portfolio companies historically mature into operational Lockheed Martin suppliers within five to seven years.

How does prime-CVC capital compare to traditional VC for defense-tech founders?

Prime-CVC capital from Lockheed Martin Ventures and similar vehicles offers two structural advantages over pure VC: a documented path to defense procurement contracts (Lockheed Martin Ventures has generated $750 million in contracts back to portfolio companies), and integration with prime supply chains that traditional VC cannot replicate. The trade-off is typically slower decision cycles, more conservative valuation expectations, and conditions around technology roadmap influence and board observation. Founders with strong commercial markets often raise hybrid rounds — VC lead with prime-CVC participation — to capture both capital structures.

Should founders outside the U.S. and NATO countries pursue prime-CVC capital?

Direct access to U.S. prime-CVC capital like Lockheed Martin Ventures is structurally limited for founders outside the U.S. and close NATO allies due to export-control regulations, ITAR (International Traffic in Arms Regulations) constraints, and CFIUS (Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States) review for foreign investment in defense-relevant technologies. Founders in non-NATO jurisdictions should typically pursue European prime CVC (BAE Systems, Airbus DS, Leonardo, Saab) or Singapore-based dual-use programmes as more accessible pathways. Diaspora-led startups domiciled in NATO countries can engage U.S. defense CVC directly, but the founder team’s nationality and the company’s data-handling practices both matter for export compliance.

Sources & Further Reading