GIC and BlackRock-managed funds anchor a fresh round that more than doubles the company’s 2023 valuation. The round is timed to the planned orbital launch of Vikram-1 from Sriharikota, the first private Indian rocket to attempt the milestone.
Skyroot Aerospace, the Hyderabad-based private launch-vehicle developer, has crossed into unicorn territory with a fresh round backed by GIC and BlackRock-managed funds, Bloomberg reported on Wednesday. The deal makes Skyroot India’s first space-technology company to reach a $1bn-plus valuation, the kind of milestone the country’s still-nascent private space sector has been working toward since regulatory liberalisation in 2020.
The trajectory is striking. Skyroot’s last priced round, a $51m Series B led by GIC in 2023, valued the company at roughly $519m. Reports of an imminent unicorn round began surfacing in April, with the new round structured to roughly double that figure.
The current Bloomberg confirmation closes the question. The combined cap table now includes GIC, Temasek, Greenko, Mukesh Bansal, and BlackRock-managed funds, with the latter having previously extended Skyroot ₹100 crore in debt financing in March.
The funding is timed to a specific operational milestone. Skyroot is preparing for the orbital launch of Vikram-1, its first commercial-class rocket, with a launch window targeted for June 2026.
The vehicle has already been dispatched to the Satish Dhawan Space Centre at Sriharikota, the Indian government launch facility on the Bay of Bengal coast that ISRO has historically used for state-led missions. A successful Vikram-1 launch would be the first time a privately developed orbital rocket has reached space from Indian soil.
The Vikram-1 milestone is the commercial step beyond Mission Prarambh, the company’s November 2022 sub-orbital demonstration with Vikram-S, which made Skyroot the first private Indian operator to reach space.
Vikram-1 is structurally different. It is a three-stage solid-fuelled rocket designed to deliver up to 480 kg of payload to a 500 km sun-synchronous orbit, the kind of payload class that competes directly with international small-satellite-launch providers.
The investor mix matters. GIC and Temasek, the two Singapore sovereign vehicles, have been positioning around Indian deeptech for several years; their continued participation through Skyroot’s growth phases signals confidence that the regulatory environment is stable enough to support the multi-year capital commitments rocketry requires.
Earlier reporting on the unicorn round indicated that the new investment will fund Vikram-1 commercial operations, the development of a larger Vikram-2 launch vehicle, and the broader infrastructure required for repeat orbital missions at commercial cadence.
The wider Indian context has shifted in Skyroot’s favour. The Indian Space Policy 2023 explicitly opened the country’s launch and satellite-services sectors to private operators, with ISRO functioning increasingly as an enabler of commercial activity rather than as the sole provider. Skyroot has been one of the principal beneficiaries of that shift, alongside fellow Hyderabad-based competitor Agnikul Cosmos and several smaller operators.
The financing case for Skyroot rests on three structural arguments. The first is that demand for small-satellite launch capacity continues to grow at rates that incumbent providers, including SpaceX’s rideshare programme, are not always able to meet at the cadence small-satellite operators want.
The second is that India’s labour-cost structure and engineering depth give Skyroot a meaningful unit-economics advantage over US-based peers at the same payload class. The third is that the regulatory environment, having liberalised, is now politically committed to supporting private rocketry as a national strategic priority.
What the round does not yet resolve is the operational question. Independent analysis of the company’s track record notes that Skyroot’s Vikram-S sub-orbital demonstration was a successful technical achievement, but did not test the orbital-class systems that Vikram-1 will need to operate in commercial service. The June launch window is the first time the company’s commercial-cadence claims will face the test that matters.
If Vikram-1 reaches orbit on schedule, Skyroot’s unicorn valuation will, on its own internal logic, look conservative. If the launch slips or fails, the company has the runway to address whatever operational gap emerges, but the political-economic narrative around Indian private space, which has been building for several years, would absorb a meaningful setback. The investors who closed the unicorn round on Wednesday have priced in successful execution. The Skyroot team has roughly six weeks to deliver it.
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