Anabelle Colaco
06 Jun 2026, 16:01 GMT+10
NEW YORK CITY, New York: Quantinuum, the quantum computing company backed by Honeywell, saw its shares rise sharply in its Nasdaq debut on June 4, giving the company a market valuation of about $17.6 billion and highlighting continued investor enthusiasm for emerging technologies.
The stock opened at $68 per share, up 13.3% from its initial public offering price of $60.
The strong debut comes amid growing interest in quantum computing, a technology that researchers believe could eventually solve certain highly complex problems faster than conventional computers.
While the industry remains in its early stages and commercial adoption is still limited, investors have increasingly been willing to bet on its long-term potential.
"The investment case is centered on the long-term potential of quantum computing and its potential role in future computing infrastructure," said IPOX Schuster analyst Kat Liu.
"The support is meaningful because quantum computing is increasingly viewed as a strategic technology with implications for national security, AI, communications and advanced computing."
Investor sentiment received an additional boost last month when the U.S. government announced a $2 billion initiative to take equity stakes in nine quantum computing companies, including a planned $100 million investment in Quantinuum.
Interest in the sector has also been fueled by advances in artificial intelligence, with some investors believing increasingly powerful AI systems could eventually drive demand for quantum computing capabilities.
The Broomfield, Colorado-based company raised $1.68 billion through an upsized IPO after selling 28 million shares at $60 each, above its marketed price range of $53 to $55 per share.
Earlier in the week, Quantinuum increased the size of the offering from 26.5 million shares, reflecting strong investor demand.
Founded in 2021 through the merger of the quantum computing businesses of Honeywell and software company Cambridge Quantum, Quantinuum develops both quantum hardware and software aimed at solving advanced computational challenges.
Analysts say the company's appeal extends beyond quantum hardware alone.
"Quantinuum also benefits from Honeywell's backing and has expanded beyond hardware into software, cybersecurity, and quantum networking applications. Commercial adoption remains limited, but investors are primarily buying into the long-term opportunity," Liu said.
Following the offering, Honeywell will retain about 48.1% of the company's voting power, according to regulatory filings.
Despite investor enthusiasm, analysts caution that the company's business remains heavily dependent on a relatively small number of customers.
Japan's RIKEN research institute accounted for approximately 60% of Quantinuum's revenue in 2025, underscoring the industry's continued reliance on government and research-related spending.
Edward Best, a partner at Willkie Farr & Gallagher, said investors should closely watch whether the company is able to diversify its customer base and expand the number and value of commercial contracts.
The broader quantum computing industry continues to face challenges including high development costs, technological hurdles and uncertainty over when widespread commercial adoption will occur.
Quantinuum's debut nevertheless adds momentum to a recovering U.S. IPO market, where investor interest has recently been concentrated in technology and other high-growth sectors.
J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley served as the lead active book-running managers for the offering.
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