Quantinuum IPO seeks $1B raise at nearly $13B valuation
Original: This new quantum stock could debut with a valuation of nearly $13 billion View original →
Quantinuum set IPO terms on May 26 that would raise about $1B and value the quantum-computing company near $13B, according to MarketWatch and Reuters coverage of the filing. The deal qualifies as Tier-1 because the expected valuation is above $1B and the offering size itself is around $1B.
The company is backed by Honeywell $HON and was formed from Honeywell Quantum Solutions and Cambridge Quantum Computing. The proposed listing gives public-market investors a direct valuation mark for trapped-ion quantum hardware, software and services at a time when AI infrastructure spending has already lifted adjacent technology multiples.
| Item | Figure |
|---|---|
| Planned IPO raise | About $1B |
| Implied valuation | Nearly $13B |
| 2025 revenue cited by Reuters | $30.9M |
| 2025 net loss cited by Reuters | $192.6M |
The revenue and loss figures put the valuation debate in plain numbers. A nearly $13B market value against 2025 revenue of $30.9M implies investors are underwriting long-dated commercialization, not current cash flow. That makes the IPO a test of appetite for frontier-computing exposure after several quantum and AI-linked equities traded at elevated multiples.
Honeywell’s stake is another market variable. Any retained ownership, lock-up terms and post-IPO governance rights will affect how investors value the parent-company read-through. For $HON holders, Quantinuum’s public mark could clarify hidden asset value but may also expose volatility if the IPO prices below the top of the range.
Next watch points are the final price range, share count, underwriter book indications and first-day trading. Investors should also read the S-1 risk factors for customer concentration, research milestones, dilution and the timeline from technical performance to recurring commercial revenue.
Not investment advice. Verify all figures with primary sources before acting.
Related Articles
Inspire Brands — which owns Dunkin', Arby's, Buffalo Wild Wings, Baskin Robbins, Sonic Drive-In, and Jimmy John's — has confidentially filed for an IPO with the SEC. Roark Capital is targeting a valuation of roughly $20 billion, which would rank among the largest restaurant IPOs ever for a platform running 33,300-plus restaurants with $33.4 billion in annual system-wide sales.
A majority of SpaceX shareholders have approved a board-recommended 5-for-1 stock split, Bloomberg reported, in a move widely read as an IPO preparatory step for one of the world's most valuable private companies. The announcement follows Cerebras's blockbuster +70% IPO debut, intensifying investor anticipation for the SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic public listings.
The U.S. Commerce Department awarded IBM a $1 billion CHIPS Act grant to build 'Anderon,' America's first dedicated 300mm quantum chip manufacturing foundry in Albany, New York. IBM matched the grant with $1 billion of its own capital, totaling $2 billion. Shares surged 11%, adding roughly $26 billion in market capitalization.
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment!