Infleqtion (INFQ) went public in February through a SPAC merger and has wasted no time making noise. The stock was trading around $14.04 before today’s surge, still well below its 52-week high of $27.50.
Infleqtion, Inc., INFQ
The catalyst: the Trump administration announced it will award $2 billion in grants to nine quantum-computing companies. Infleqtion is set to receive $100 million, joining IBM ($1 billion) and GlobalFoundries ($375 million) as recipients. The deals also give the U.S. government a minority equity stake in each company.
On top of that, Infleqtion separately signed a Letter of Intent with the Commerce Department’s CHIPS Research and Development Office for another $100 million to advance its neutral-atom quantum computing work. That funding is contingent on milestone completions and due diligence.
That’s a lot of government attention for a company with a $2.3 billion market cap.
Infleqtion’s first earnings report as a public company gave investors something concrete to work with. Q1 2026 revenue came in at $9.5 million, up 14% year-over-year. The per-share loss narrowed to $0.26 from $0.41 a year prior.
The company holds $569 million in cash and carries no debt. Full-year 2026 revenue guidance was raised to at least $40 million.
Beyond the financials, Infleqtion has been busy. It shipped upgraded quantum hardware to the International Space Station via a NASA cargo mission. It secured a $2 million DARPA contract to develop software for hybrid quantum computing networks. And it’s working with NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory on what would be the first quantum sensor in orbit designed to measure Earth’s gravitational field.
Infleqtion’s core technology relies on neutral atoms — individual atoms held in place by lasers, used as qubits. The architecture has gained credibility quickly, partly due to a Harvard University paper from December 2023 that demonstrated error correction using neutral atoms and scaled encoded qubits from 2–3 up to 48 in a single experiment.
Infleqtion has already delivered 100-qubit and 500-qubit systems to research institutions in the UK and Japan. It is currently the only publicly traded vehicle for pure-play exposure to neutral-atom quantum computing. French startup Pasqal, another neutral-atom developer, is expected to go public later this year.
The company’s portfolio also includes quantum sensors, atomic clocks, and its new Quantum Spectrum product line — atom-based radio frequency hardware designed to replace traditional antennas.
The government grants sent the broader quantum sector higher. D-Wave Quantum (QBTS) was up roughly 25%, Rigetti Computing (RGTI) gained over 24%, and IonQ (IONQ) rose more than 11% in pre-market trading.
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