Private Equity

Updated:

StealthPoint

StealthPoint positions itself at the intersection of venture growth and mission-critical government technology.

StealthPoint

StealthPoint

StealthPoint positions itself at the intersection of venture growth and mission-critical government technology. The firm targets companies that have already demonstrated technological viability and need capital specifically to scale revenue inside the defense and intelligence ecosystem. Its mandate cuts across hardware and software, with a stated focus on small teams delivering outsized efficiencies to large commercial and government enterprises. The strategy is built on minority equity investments in founder-led businesses preparing for an exit. StealthPoint couples its capital with a proprietary go-to-market framework that spans lead generation, channel marketing, and large enterprise or project sales. The firm claims an edge in accessing large, funded government initiatives — opportunities that sit below the radar of conventional technology investors. Investment criteria center on companies supporting the mission of defense and intelligence agencies, though specific portfolio names are not publicly disclosed. Operational details remain lean. The firm lists no additional offices, no identifiable principals, and no disclosed assets under management or total deployment figures. Its public footprint is limited to a single-page website that doubles as a sourcing intake form. That opacity is consistent with the community it serves — firms investing in classified-adjacent technologies rarely publish team bios, portfolio construction details, or deal announcements. StealthPoint's structural distinction is its double-sided access: one side into the capital-constrained technology founders building for defense end-markets, the other into the program offices and prime contractors that define procurement requirements. The model resembles a boutique growth platform more than a blind-pool fund. Without disclosed fund vehicles, co-investors, or philanthropic structures, the firm reads as a tightly held partnership operating below institutional radar.

General information

Firm type

Private Equity

Year founded

AUM

Undisclosed

Location

Region

North America

Country

United States

City

Half Moon Bay

Corporate office

Half Moon Bay, CA, United States

Sector focus

Industrial TechEnterprise SoftwareDefense & Government Tech

Frequently asked questions

What type of companies does StealthPoint invest in?

StealthPoint targets hardware and software companies that fuel digital transformation inside the defense and intelligence communities. The firm invests at the growth equity stage, backing technologically-proven teams that need capital to scale revenue ahead of an exit. Its criteria require a direct connection to mission-critical government initiatives.

How does StealthPoint source its deals?

The firm relies on relationships within technology, industry, and government rather than competitive auction processes or advisor-led introductions. StealthPoint describes its sourcing as 'off-the-beaten-path' and credits a trusted network for generating proprietary deal flow in defense-adjacent markets.

Does StealthPoint take control positions or board seats?

StealthPoint makes minority equity investments and partners with existing founders. The firm does not claim to seek control, instead structuring its involvement around revenue growth support and go-to-market execution ahead of a planned exit.

What does StealthPoint bring beyond capital?

The firm provides a go-to-market ecosystem that includes lead generation, channel marketing, and large enterprise or project sales capabilities. It also offers what it calls 'privileged insights into large, funded initiatives' — access derived from networks spanning government, technology, and industry.

Is StealthPoint a single-family office or a venture firm?

StealthPoint is structured as a private equity asset manager rather than a family office. The firm does not disclose its underlying capital base, limited partners, or fund structure, which is consistent with boutique managers operating in defense and intelligence-adjacent technology.

Profile maintained by using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.

Need institutional-grade insight on family offices?

Altss delivers:

Principals with verified direct contactsAllocation history by asset classOSINT-derived deal signals
Book a demo

Prefer a guided tour?

We’ll walk you through:

Interactive funding timelinesCustom mandate & allocation filters
Book a demo