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Is The Newest Quantum Stock IPO a Buy?

The Motley Fool
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⚡ Quantum Brief
Quantinuum, formed by Honeywell and Cambridge Quantum, went public at $60 per share but now trades at $51. The company uses trapped-ion quantum systems, which offer higher fidelity without cryogenic cooling, competing with IonQ. Revenue grew 34% to $30.9 million in 2025, but losses widened to $192.6 million, with heavy reliance on volatile leases. At a $14.3 billion valuation, it trades at 463 times sales, making it less attractive than faster-growing IonQ. Despite securing $100 million in U.S. funding, its high valuation and competition limit investor appeal.
Is The Newest Quantum Stock IPO a Buy?

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Quantinuum (QNT 6.44%), formed from the merger of Honeywell's (HON 4.44%) quantum computing division and UK-based Cambridge Quantum, went public at $60 per share on June 4. But as of this writing, its stock trades at about $51. Let's see why this quantum stock fizzled out -- and if it's worth buying as the bulls look the other way. What does Quantinuum do? Quantinuum, like its chief competitor IonQ (IONQ +0.34%), uses trapped-ion systems to power its quantum systems. Unlike older electron-driven systems, which require cryogenic refrigeration and exhibit high error rates, trapped-ion systems exhibit higher fidelity and don't require refrigeration. Image source: Getty Images. Quantinuum and IonQ are scaling their trapped-ion systems in different ways. Quantinuum uses a "shuttling" system that moves individual ions through a grid, while IonQ connects multiple ions via quantum-entangled fiber-optic cables known as photonic links. Both companies use their own proprietary metrics to gauge their quantum computing power, making direct comparisons difficult. They both market themselves as "full-stack" quantum computing companies that serve the software, hardware, and application markets. However, Quantinuum tries to lock developers into its own ecosystem through TKET, its proprietary compiler. IonQ supports a wider range of open-source quantum frameworks. ExpandNASDAQ: QNTQuantinuumToday's Change(-6.44%) $-3.54Current Price$51.40Key Data PointsMarket Cap$14BDay's Range$50.10 - $55.3552wk Range$50.10 - $71.35Volume5.9MAvg Vol9.9M Why isn't Quantinuum attracting much interest? In 2025, Quantinuum's revenue rose 34% to $30.9 million, but its net loss widened from $144.1 million to $192.6 million. Most of its revenue came from leases, which are highly concentrated and volatile (a single lease accounted for $16.5 million in revenue in 2025). The rest of its revenue mainly comes from its cloud-based quantum computing services. Over the long term, Quantinuum expects to sell more quantum software to commercial customers in the cybersecurity, chemistry, and materials sciences markets. But at its current market cap of $14.3 billion, it trades at 463 times last year's sales. IonQ, which more than doubled its revenue to $269 million in 2025, is worth $21.2 billion -- or 79 times its trailing sales. Quantinuum's sky-high valuation made it a tough stock to buy, especially when IonQ was bigger, growing faster, and locking in more high-profile contracts. The market's current obsession with upcoming IPOs such as SpaceX, Anthropic, and OpenAI exacerbated that pressure. Quantinuum recently drew significant attention when it secured up to $100 million in funding from the Department of Commerce as part of the CHIPS and Science Act. But for now, it's still a speculative quantum stock that simply isn't as attractive as IonQ or the other market leaders.Read NextJun 9, 2026 •By Geoffrey SeilerQuantum Computing Just Had Its First Big IPO, but Is the Stock a Buy?Jun 8, 2026 •By Anders Bylund9 Best Quantum Computing Stocks for 2026 and How to InvestJun 10, 2026 •By Josh Kohn-LindquistInvesco (PPA) vs Tema (NASA): Which Aerospace and Space ETF Is the Better Buy?Jun 10, 2026 •By Jonathan PoncianoZIM Executive Sells $381,000 in Stock as Shares Jump 47% Ahead of $35 BuyoutJun 10, 2026 •By Leo SunSpaceX Is Going Public at a $1.77 Trillion Valuation. Here's What a $10,000 Investment Could Return.Jun 10, 2026 •By Keith NoonanSpaceX IPO: Don't Buy the Stock Before You Understand the Company's $26.5 Trillion PivotAbout the AuthorLeo Sun is a contributing Motley Fool stock market analyst who has worked with the company since 2013, covering technology, consumer goods, industrial, and financial sectors. He became a self-made millionaire by age 40 through long-term investing, crediting lessons from Warren Buffett and Peter Lynch. Leo is a regular guest on CNBC Asia providing stock analysis on Chinese technology companies, including Tencent, Baidu, and Alibaba. He previously wrote for InvestorGuide and holds a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of Texas at Austin.TMFSunLionX@TMFSunLionStocks MentionedQuantinuumNASDAQ: QNT$51.40(-6.44%)-$3.54Motley Fool Stock Advisor’s Latest PickGet Access---% Avg ReturnHoneywell InternationalNASDAQ: HON$206.12(-4.44%)-$9.58IonQNYSE: IONQ$56.63(-0.11%)-$0.06*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.

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