D-Wave Quantum (QBTS) Stock Soars 70% as Federal Government Takes Equity Stake

Table of Contents D-Wave Quantum hosted its first-ever investor day presentation Monday at the New York Stock Exchange, where federal financing took center stage over technological roadmaps. D-Wave Quantum Inc., QBTS Currently trading near $29.61, D-Wave represents one of nine enterprises receiving capital from the Trump administration’s $2 billion quantum technology commitment. Through its Commerce Department agreement, D-Wave plans to issue $100 million in common shares directly to the federal government — effectively making Washington a shareholder in the quantum computing firm. Shares have delivered approximately 70% returns over the trailing twelve months. Wall Street analysts at Rosenblatt and Stifel both recommend buying QBTS, establishing price objectives of $43 and $35 respectively. The $100 million capital infusion won’t arrive as an immediate lump sum payment. Chief Development Officer Trevor Lanting explained that D-Wave’s funding depends on achieving specific research and development benchmarks, encompassing prototype systems, quantum interconnection technology, advanced wiring solutions, and innovative fabrication methodologies. “We’re looking at sequential tool installations, fabrication process stages, and prototype deliveries,” Lanting explained. The structure is milestone-dependent rather than upfront capital. CEO Alan Baratz characterized the agreement as confirmation of D-Wave’s two-pronged approach — maintaining quantum annealing platforms designed for optimization challenges alongside emerging gate-model architectures targeting wider commercial applications. Baratz generated considerable attention when he disclosed D-Wave’s interest in leveraging IBM’s forthcoming Anderon semiconductor fabrication facility for quantum processor manufacturing. “The moment I learned about the announcement, I immediately contacted Trevor asking if we could access the IBM foundry,” Baratz shared with attendees. Anderon, supported by $1 billion contributions from both the Commerce Department and IBM, is being developed as an accessible quantum chip production center. IBM’s Jay Gambetta positioned the company as a “foundational customer,” signaling availability for external partners. Baratz confirmed D-Wave would “definitely” pursue this option if technical requirements align. The quantum computing company also presented its extended development timeline: scaling to 100,000 qubits for annealing platforms, plus a gate-model trajectory reaching 100 logical qubits by 2032. Immediate objectives include launching a 17-physical-qubit platform in 2026 followed by a 49-physical-qubit system in 2027. D-Wave disclosed 26 public-sector customers accumulated during the previous 18 months alongside $588 million in available liquidity. The company is transitioning its business model from quantum computing-as-a-service subscriptions toward direct system purchases, which leadership interprets as evidence of market maturation. Financially, first quarter 2026 results showed a -$0.05 per share loss, outperforming the -$0.08 Wall Street consensus by 37.5%. Revenue totaled $2.9 million, falling approximately 30% below the $4.14 million analyst forecast. Twelve-month trailing revenue stands at $12.44 million while the company continues operating at a loss. Defense sector engagement has accelerated significantly. Baratz attributed a partnership with Anduril Industries and Davidson Technologies — unveiled at D-Wave’s customer conference in January — as the catalyst for heightened federal attention. The firm now maintains “a substantial opportunity pipeline spanning multiple government agencies, predominantly within the Department of Defense.”