Firefly Aerospace readies for a big year in orbit with $175M D round

Date:

Share post:


Firefly Aerospace has raised a massive late-stage funding round ahead as it prepares for the launch of its lunar lander later this year and the first mission of its Elytra spacecraft next year. 

The $175 million Series D, which set Firefly’s valuation at over $2 billion, apparently closed in less than two months in a show of faith in the company’s new CEO — aerospace executive Jason Kim, who was installed in the position on October 1. Kim had previously led Boeing’s satellite maker Millennium Space Systems.

Firefly also plans to use some of the new capital to move to full rate production of its Alpha rocket and to accelerate development of the Medium Launch Vehicle it’s co-developing with Northrop Grumman. Firefly has launched Alpha five times since September 2021, though only three of these successfully placed the payloads in orbit. The company set a new record with the third Alpha mission in September 2023; called Victus Nox, the mission demonstrated rapid launch capabilities, with Firefly launching the Alpha rocket just 27 hours after receiving the green light from the U.S. Space Force. (The company has been tapped for a second “rapid response” mission to launch next year.)

The new capital will help Firefly meet the rest of the missions on the manifest, which include an agreement with L3Harris for up to 20 launches from 2027, and one with Lockheed Martin for 15 committed launches through 2029. 

The latest raise was led by a new investor, RPM Ventures, with participation from existing investors and additional new investors GiantLeap Capital and Human Element. This later stage deal seems to be a bit of an exception for RPM, which says on its website that around 75% of its investments are in Series A stage companies. 

The round stands out as one of the few sizable late-stage deals in the space sector this year, which has largely been dominated by activity in the seed and Series A stages, according to a recent report from UK-based firm Seraphim Space. This is in stark contrast to the period between 2019-2021, during which more than half of all venture funding was allocated to Series D+ companies.



Source link

Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden
Lisa Holden is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes health, sport, tech, and more. Some of her favorite topics include the latest trends in fitness and wellness, the best ways to use technology to improve your life, and the latest developments in medical research.

Recent posts

Related articles

Hyundai is giving away free Tesla NACs adapters to its EV customers

Hyundai said Monday it will send customers who have bought or leased an EV before January 31...

OpenAI’s o3 suggests AI models are scaling in new ways — but so are the costs

Last month, AI founders and investors told TechCrunch that we’re now in the “second era of scaling...

Nvidia’s CES 2025 keynote: How to watch

Nvidia will no doubt have the biggest CES 2025. After all, the company has pretty much the...

An investigation finds that Google Maps fails users in the West Bank 

A Wired investigation found that Google Maps can be near impossible to use in the West Bank,...

AI startups attracted 25% of Europe’s VC funding

Venture funding into Europe is heading for a flat year, but this may obfuscate the fact that...

Coralogix acquires AI observability platform Aporia

Coralogix, the well-funded observability platform, on Monday announced that it has acquired Aporia, a startup that focuses...

CES 2025 is coming: TechCrunch wants to meet your hardware startup

According to the calendar, we’re a mere weeks out from CES — the perfect gift for your...

Eero’s Outdoor 7 long-distance mesh unit solved our yearslong Wi-Fi quandary in 10 minutes

So far in life, I haven’t needed be a “mesh guy.” A well-chosen and carefully placed Wi-Fi...