Divergent Technologies Lands $290M for Military Manufacturing Expansion
- Ariel Shapira
- Nov 25, 2025
- 1 min read
Advanced manufacturing startup Divergent Technologies pulled in $290 million in fresh funding to grow its defense production capabilities. Rochefort Asset Management backed the round.
According to a recent publication, the deal values Divergent at $2.3 billion, according to Bloomberg's initial report. Major defense players, including Lockheed Martin, RTX, and General Dynamics, buy components from the company.
Divergent received $250 million in equity plus $40 million in debt financing. Management will pump the cash into expanding current Los Angeles facilities while launching a brand new Oklahoma plant in 2026.
The company operates specialized 3D printers capable of making 600 distinct parts. Metal missile airframes drive the bulk of revenue, CEO Lukas Czinger explained to Bloomberg. He called them the company's primary product.
Defense manufacturing is attracting serious investor attention right now. Weapons production keeps climbing while traditional factories struggle to deliver. Startups offering modern production methods are filling gaps in strained supply chains.
Divergent's technology lets military contractors source critical components faster than conventional manufacturing allows. This capability matters as Pentagon procurement priorities shift toward domestic suppliers who can scale quickly.
The fundraiser signals confidence in companies rebuilding America's industrial base for defense needs. Investors see opportunity in firms that solve production bottlenecks, slowing military equipment delivery.
