WDC's investment in Qolab gives it early exposure to quantum hardware, pairing nanofabrication expertise with superconducting tech for long-term growth.
Quantum computing is still years away from commercial relevance. Competition is stiff in the quantum computing realm.
Quantum computing is becoming a new focus for tech sector investors. D-Wave's approach to building quantum computers differs from most of its competitors.
Delta Gold Technologies PLC (AQSE:DGQ) earlier this week discussed its ongoing research in quantum computing and the company's commercial strategy following its recent listing on the Aquis Stock Exchange. The company is pursuing a novel approach to building qubits, the core component of quantum computers, by using nanoscale gold.
QUBT boosts liquidity above $1.5 billion, giving it the stability to advance quantum development and scale its photonics foundry.
The era of buying stock based on science fiction potential has finally ended. Throughout 2025, the quantum computing sector underwent a massive, necessary shift in investor sentiment.
When it comes to artificial intelligence (AI) and quantum computing, large and mega-cap stocks have captured the majority of investor attention. All of the Magnificent Seven companies play some role in AI, from NVIDIA's NASDAQ: NVDA advanced chips to Tesla's NASDAQ: TSLA pursuit of autonomous driving.
RGTI's push toward a future quantum fab signals tighter process control, higher fidelities and a potential long-term edge.
Momentum is returning to the quantum computing sector.
Just when you thought the quantum computing trade was a bubble that was about to go bust for good, the broad basket of names went on to enjoy a robust bounce, with D-Wave Quantum (NYSE:QBTS) rocketing more than 50% from its lows of November.
IONQ and QBTS shine as quantum momentum builds, with record performance metrics, strong revenue gains and new systems driving investor attention to 2026.
After a prolonged rally throughout 2025, quantum computing stocks are starting to give back their gains. Big tech could serve as a backdoor way to gain exposure to the quantum computing opportunity.