USA Trending News

Quantum Computing Stock Will Be Worth This Much in 2030

  • Quantum Computing has emerged alongside other popular quantum stocks such as IonQ, Rigetti Computing, and D-Wave Quantum over the last year.

  • While the company’s approach to building quantum applications is interesting, past ambitions in other markets and an inconsistent financial profile should make investors pause before blindly buying the hype narrative.

  • Although Quantum Computing has interesting potential, the amount of unknowns surrounding the company’s future are hard to ignore.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Quantum Computing ›

One of the more curious companies that has piqued investor intrigue in the quantum computing market is a business called (wait for it!) Quantum Computing (NASDAQ: QUBT). With a name like that, I wonder how it landed on so many radars.

Sarcasm aside, Quantum Computing (the business) deserves a look — and not just because of its 2,400% share price gains over the last year. To me, the company’s technological promises and its actual business just don’t align.

Let’s explore how Quantum Computing is attempting to disrupt the artificial intelligence (AI) realm and then dig into whether or not the company has what it takes to fulfill its lofty ambitions.

Is Quantum Computing the next multibagger AI stock? Read on to find out.

Quantum-based applications have the potential to transform the computing industry thanks to their fundamentally differentiated architectures. In simple terms, classical computing is based on binary code, written through a series of bits expressed as 1 or 0.

Quantum computing uses qubits, which means they can exist as both 1 and 0 at the same time — a process known as superposition. This allows for more complex information processing compared to today’s classical computers. There are multiple ways that companies are developing qubits.

IonQ relies on a process called trapped-ion, which essentially uses lasers to trap atoms and use them as the foundation of a qubit. Meanwhile, other competitors such as Rigetti Computing and D-Wave Quantum use superconducting circuits and quantum annealing techniques to make qubits.

Quantum Computing, on the other hand, is using light (photons) as opposed to Rigetti and D-Wave’s electricity-based foundation or IonQ’s trapped atom technology. In theory, photonic qubits may be more energy efficient and easier to scale than other approaches that are heavily reliant on sophisticated cooling systems.

Image source: Getty Images.

Before buying into the idea that Quantum Computing is on the verge of a technological breakthrough, consider the following:

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back to top button