Quantum computing stocks got a boost this week after President Trump signed two executive orders aimed at keeping the United States ahead in the race for quantum technology. The move sent shares of several companies sharply higher on Tuesday.
Quantinuum led the gains, rising more than 13% by market close. Infleqtion was up 12%, IBM gained 5%, and D-Wave closed up 2%. This happened while the broader market fell, with the Nasdaq dropping 2.2% and the S&P 500 down more than 1.4%.
The first order establishes the QC-ADDS initiative. It directs federal agencies to build the first quantum computer capable of meaningful scientific research, to be housed at a Department of Energy facility. The Pentagon must also deploy at least three next-generation quantum sensor projects by 2028.
The second order focuses on cybersecurity. Federal agencies must upgrade their most sensitive systems to quantum-resistant encryption by the early 2030s. Federal contractors face the same rules, and the State Department was told to push allies to adopt compatible standards.
IBM CEO Arvind Krishna called the orders an “important, timely step forward.” Infleqtion CEO Matthew Kinsella said they make quantum a “national imperative.”
This is not Trump’s first move in the space. He signed the National Quantum Initiative Act in 2018, which authorized up to $1.2 billion for quantum research. In May, his administration said it would invest an additional $2 billion across nine quantum companies in exchange for equity stakes.
IonQ uses trapped ions rather than superconducting methods, giving it superior accuracy. The company holds the world record for two-qubit gate fidelity. Revenue rose 755% in the first quarter to $65 million.
IonQ, Inc., IONQ
D-Wave already has a working product — an annealing quantum computer used for optimization problems like scheduling and supply chains. It recently secured two orders worth a combined $20 million. The company is also developing a general-purpose quantum computer.
Nvidia is taking a different path. It is not building a quantum processor, but it has adapted its NVLink hardware into NVQLink to connect quantum systems with existing networks. It also launched an AI model for quantum error correction and updated its CUDA software to include quantum functions, now called CUDA-Q.
Despite Tuesday’s stock gains, most pure-play quantum companies are still not profitable. Quantinuum, Infleqtion, and D-Wave all rely on government contracts and private funding. Experts say commercial viability may still be years away, though federal backing could help accelerate the timeline.
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