On Thursday, the Trump administration unveiled a $2 billion funding initiative targeting nine companies in the quantum computing sector. According to the Commerce Department’s confirmation, these agreements include provisions for the federal government to acquire equity stakes in each recipient organization.
IBM emerges as the primary beneficiary, securing a $1 billion government allocation. The technology giant announced plans to contribute an additional $1 billion from its own resources, with the combined funds designated for constructing what the company describes as America’s first dedicated quantum chip production facility.
Semiconductor manufacturer GlobalFoundries will obtain $375 million through the initiative. Meanwhile, smaller publicly listed firms D-Wave Quantum, Rigetti Computing, and Infleqtion are projected to receive approximately $100 million apiece. Emerging startup Diraq could potentially secure $38 million.
The funding package also encompasses additional quantum technology startups such as Atom Computing, PsiQuantum, and Quantinuum.
Publicly traded companies involved in the program experienced substantial stock price increases following the announcement. Both IBM and GlobalFoundries registered approximately 7% gains during premarket sessions. D-Wave, Rigetti, and Infleqtion posted even more impressive increases, climbing roughly 15% or higher.
International Business Machines Corporation, IBM
D-Wave verified that its entire $100 million allocation will be structured as an equity investment. The company’s recent valuation exceeded $7 billion. Both Rigetti and Infleqtion indicated their funding arrangements would follow comparable equity-based frameworks.
The capital distribution originates from the Chips and Science Act of 2022, legislation that designated resources specifically for emerging technology initiatives.
This marks another instance of the Trump administration acquiring ownership interests in companies deemed strategically significant. Previous similar moves include securing approximately 10% of Intel, along with investments in rare earth mineral companies MP Materials and Vulcan Elements.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick emphasized that the agreements are designed to generate returns for taxpayers. A senior Commerce Department representative acknowledged that these investments may require extended timeframes to mature, noting that distributing capital across multiple entities helps mitigate overall risk exposure.
According to informed sources, the administration is concurrently developing an executive order specifically addressing the quantum technology sector.
Quantum computing systems leverage quantum mechanical principles to execute calculations exponentially faster than conventional computers for specific complex computational challenges. However, current quantum systems consume substantial computational resources correcting operational errors, preventing them from achieving practical speed advantages over traditional computing platforms on a net efficiency basis.
Major technology corporations including Microsoft and Alphabet’s Google are also committing significant resources to quantum computing development, spurred by recent technological advances in the discipline.
All agreements remain subject to finalization before fund disbursement occurs.
The post Quantum Computing Stocks Soar as Trump Administration Announces $2 Billion Investment Initiative appeared first on Blockonomi.

