BY Fraser Tennant
Investments in the UK defence and national security sectors surged in 2024, with both government funding and private capital investments increasing, according to a new report by Heligan Group
In its ‘Investing in Defence 2025’ report, Heligan Group reveals that investment funding – primarily driven by venture capital for European defence, security and resilience start-ups – reached an all-time high of $5.2bn last year, nearly a fivefold increase over six years.
This boom, states the report, has been driven by geopolitical tensions and conflict, primarily the Russian war against Ukraine, which has driven greater demand for defence technology – increasing by 64 percent between 2014 and 2024.
The UK is also pursuing innovation programmes via the National Security Strategic Investment Fund and accelerators such as the Defence and Security Accelerator, with innovation centrally coordinated by the newly established UK Defence Innovation organisation.
“Public-private partnerships fundamentally reduce investment risk for private investors and provide long-term growth prospects,” said Matt Croker, a partner at Heligan Group. “PPPs also foster innovation and build the critical links and understanding between those with the need and those with the solutions.
“A new UK-European Union (EU) post-Brexit agreement also paves the way for UK-based firms’ access to the EU’s new Security Action for Europe – a €150b fund providing loans for defence projects,” he continued. “Subsequently, I believe that the long-term stability and resilience of investments in defence are improved due to a sector strongly influenced by geopolitical necessity and one that is financially backed with governmental support.”
The report also notes that alongside private equity and corporate investors. mainstream investors are playing a significant role, with a greater focus on dual-use technologies such as artificial intelligence, cyber security, autonomous systems and quantum, despite historically having shied away from such investments.
Heligan Group also recognises a tangible realignment of ethical and environmental, social and governance lines, with many seeing a momentum shift, with attitudes to defence and security investing now framed as essential for societal security and stability in the context of war in Eastern Europe.
Mr Crocker concluded: “With heightened threat levels, investors would appear to be loosening restrictions and recognising defence as a critical and necessary aspect of the overall investment landscape, as well as a potentially untapped and lucrative addition to their investment portfolios.”
Report: Investing in Defence 2025