Quantinuum's IPO Is Putting Pressure on IonQ, Rigetti Computing, and D-Wave Quantum. Here's Which Quantum Computing Stock Survives the Reset.

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When Quantinuum (QNT +4.80%) filed in May to go public on the Nasdaq, and then did so in early June -- targeting up to $1.05 billion in proceeds at a $12.7 billion valuation -- the quantum computing sector had a moment of reckoning. A well-capitalized, Honeywell-backed (HON +3.22%), full-stack quantum company has come to public markets with institutional credibility, a $100 million U.S. government stake, and the kind of hardware benchmarks that are making every existing quantum computing pure play look over its shoulder. Its actual IPO was even better than originally proposed, with a $1.68 billion raise and a valuation of over $15 billion. The question for quantum investors who already hold IonQ (IONQ +5.83%), Rigetti Computing (RGTI +8.25%), or D-Wave Quantum (QBTS +12.67%) isn't whether Quantinuum's initial public offering (IPO) matters. It does. The question is which of these three has its feet under it firmly enough to withstand the comparison -- and which is running out of time. Image source: Getty Images. ExpandNASDAQ: RGTIRigetti ComputingToday's Change(8.25%) $1.73Current Price$22.71Key Data PointsMarket Cap$7.5BDay's Range$22.13 - $23.5652wk Range$10.30 - $58.15Volume10.5KAvg Vol40MGross Margin-5945.49% The one with the most to lose: Rigetti Computing Rigetti Computing posted first-quarter 2026 revenue of $4.4 million. As of the end of the quarter, it had $569 million in cash on its books and no debt, which buys it some time -- but the revenue base is thin enough that a $12.7 billion Quantinuum entering the same investor conversations creates real pressure on perception. Rigetti has won a contract to supply a 108-qubit system to the Indian government's Centre for Development of Advanced Computing, and its 128-qubit system is actively rolling out. Its technology is advancing. Its commercialization hasn't caught up. Until and unless it does, Rigetti will remain a hardware story in a market that is starting to demand revenue proof. ExpandNYSE: QBTSD-Wave QuantumToday's Change(12.67%) $2.96Current Price$26.33Key Data PointsMarket Cap$9.7BDay's Range$24.93 - $27.1452wk Range$12.75 - $46.75Volume11.4KAvg Vol33.4MGross Margin32.92% The most interesting pivot: D-Wave Quantum Here's the counterintuitive one. D-Wave Quantum posted Q1 2026 revenue of $2.9 million -- down 81% from the prior year -- and the stock initially got punished for it. But look past the revenue line: Bookings for the quarter rose 1,994% year over year to $33.4 million. The company closed a $20 million system sale to Florida Atlantic University and a $10 million, two-year quantum-computing-as-a-service agreement with a Fortune 100 company. Remaining performance obligations jumped 563%. D-Wave occupies a position in this space that no other company does: Thanks to its recent acquisition of peer Quantum Circuits, it is the only dual-platform quantum company, running both quantum annealing and gate-model systems. Quantum annealing systems differ from most other forms of the technology being pursued in that they are only useful for a limited range of applications. However, they are already capable of delivering solutions to real enterprise optimization problems today -- in areas such as routing, logistics, and finance -- even though fault-tolerant hardware has yet to mature. All this offers it a commercial wedge into an enterprise market that Quantinuum's trapped-ion hardware doesn't compete with directly. When D-Wave's booked sales convert into revenue in the back half of 2026, the story will change. ExpandNYSE: IONQIonQToday's Change(5.83%) $3.37Current Price$61.22Key Data PointsMarket Cap$23BDay's Range$60.59 - $63.5652wk Range$25.89 - $84.64Volume5.2KAvg Vol30.4MGross Margin-2879.52% The clear survivor: IonQ IonQ is the name that emerges from Quantinuum's IPO in the strongest position. Its first-quarter revenue rose 755% year over year to $64.7 million, beating its own guidance midpoint by 30%. Full-year revenue guidance was raised to a range of $260 million to $270 million, which would amount to organic growth of more than 100%, with a backlog of $470 million. The reason IonQ will survive this reset isn't just its revenue -- it's that IonQ and Quantinuum are actually fighting on the same battlefield. Both use trapped-ion qubit hardware. Both are pursuing enterprise and government contracts. IonQ trades at roughly 179 times sales, while Quantinuum trades near 505 times sales. When institutional investors compare the two, IonQ looks like the less expensive version of the same bet -- with a live revenue base that Quantinuum is still building toward.Read NextJun 15, 2026 •By Rich SmithWhy IonQ Computing Stock Just PoppedJun 14, 2026 •By Keith NoonanWhy IonQ Stock Ended This Week in the Green Despite Early Sell-OffsJun 12, 2026 •By Matt DiLallo3 Best Quantum Computing ETFs for 2026 and How to InvestJun 8, 2026 •By Anders Bylund9 Best Quantum Computing Stocks for 2026 and How to InvestJun 8, 2026 •By Rich SmithWhy Did IonQ Stock Bounce Back Today?Jun 5, 2026 •By Rich SmithWhy IonQ Stock Crashed TodayStocks MentionedIonQNYSE: IONQ$61.18(+5.76%)+$3.33Motley Fool Stock Advisor’s Latest PickGet Access---% Avg ReturnD-Wave QuantumNYSE: QBTS$26.26(+12.37%)+$2.89Rigetti ComputingNASDAQ: RGTI$22.71(+8.25%)+$1.73QuantinuumNASDAQ: QNT$57.91(+4.80%)+$2.65*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.
