Why Policy Goals Will Make 2026 a Breakout Year for IONQ, RGTI, QBTS
Werte in diesem Artikel
Since the original National Quantum Initiative (NQI) Act in 2018, quantum has been treated as a strategic technology alongside AI and advanced semiconductors. The FY 2025 NQI budget supplement shows federal agencies collectively investing about $1 billion a year in quantum information science, up from roughly $456 million in 2019, spread across Department of Energy (DOE), National Science Foundation (NSF), National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Department of Defense (DOD) and the intelligence community.The steady buildout has set the stage for the next wave of public-sector support, one that could reshape the trajectory of pure-play quantum companies heading into 2026.Washington Raises the Stakes: NQI Reauthorization for 2025-2029Reauthorization bills now moving through Congress will scale the program for 2025–2029. On the House side, H.R. 6213 will authorize about $1.8 billion over five years, funding new DOE QIS centers, NSF research and education hubs, NIST quantum labs and NASA experiments in space-based quantum applications. In the Senate, a competing Commerce Committee bill will go further, authorizing $2.7 billion over five years and explicitly pivoting the NQI toward applied projects, new NIST and NSF quantum centers, quantum testbeds and workforce hubs, and expanded public-private partnerships designed to push laboratory breakthroughs into real-world systems.DARPA, AFRL and DOEIn April 2025, DARPA selected a group of companies, including pureplay quantum computing firms like IonQ IONQ and Rigetti RGTI, for a program to test the practicality of quantum computing. For IonQ, Rigetti and D-Wave, which continued to remain loss-making, such deals tied to DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative helped support their growth narrative. In September 2025, Rigetti announced a $5.8 million, three-year contract with the U.S. Air Force Research Lab for quantum networking, while IonQ signed an MOU with the Department of Energy on space-related quantum applications.These are not massive amounts relative to big-tech R&D budgets, but in the context of sub-scale quantum companies, they matter. For many of these firms, a single defense award can represent a visible share of annual revenues and, more importantly, a strong signal that the government views their technology as strategically relevant.Quantum Subsidies and Investor ExpectationsOn paper, companies like IonQ, Rigetti, D-Wave QBTS, and Quantum Computing Inc. QUBT remain in early stage with low revenues, sizable operating losses and technology still far from mainstream deployment. Yet, their valuations have expanded dramatically since the 2024 lows, and much of that premium reflects expectations about government spending rather than near-term enterprise demand.When investors see a multi-year federal reauthorization bill, a new DOD or DOE pilot, or fresh quantum subsidies from the UK, EU or Japan, they are effectively inferring that the public sector will be the anchor customer for quantum through the 2030s. This is why a $5-10 million defense deal can move a stock as much as a full year of commercial bookings.Trump's EUV Startup: A Template for State-backed Deep TechAccording to reports by The Wall Street Journal (first reported) and Reuters, the Trump administration has agreed to inject up to $150 million into xLight, a startup developing free-electron lasers that could power next-generation extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography for advanced chips. The investment is being channeled through the CHIPS R&D office and marks the first major move under a $7.4 billion research institute originally launched during tenure of the prior administration.xLight’s goal is to build more efficient laser sources for EUV tools, a space currently dominated by ASML in the Netherlands, potentially reshaping the strategic bottleneck in high-end semiconductor manufacturing.While xLight is not Trump’s startup in an ownership sense, the symbolism is clear. Washington is willing to take direct, equity-like stakes in deep-tech hardware companies tied to national security and supply-chain resilience. The line between subsidy and state venture capital is blurring.If the U.S. government is prepared to own a slice of an EUV laser startup to secure chipmaking, it is not hard to imagine future programs that look more equity-like or even revenue-guaranteed for quantum hardware companies.What This Means for Investors in 2026For now, quantum stocks are still more story than cash flow. But the story is increasingly written on budget tables, grant calls and contract announcements, not just in lab breakthroughs.From an analytical perspective, anyone modeling this space ahead of 2026 needs to treat policy and procurement as core inputs to valuation, not background noise. Tracking bills, defense solicitations and R&D partnerships are becoming crucial for investors in their decision-making.YTD Price PerformanceImage Source: Zacks Investment ResearchValuation frameworks should focus on government procurement, not traditional product cycles. Companies like IonQ, Rigetti, D-Wave and QUBT, all carrying a Zacks Rank #3 (Hold) now, are likely to depend on multi-year federal contracts, milestone payments and access to government testbeds long before they generate meaningful commercial revenues.Position Quantum as a Long-Term, Policy-Sensitive BetQuantum stocks should also be treated as small, long-term, policy-sensitive positions. The recent xLight example shows that Washington is willing to take equity-like stakes in critical hardware startups. That same playbook could eventually apply to quantum firms, especially those tied to defense or space projects.The Bottom Line for 2026: Watch Policy MomentumFor 2026, the takeaway is straightforward: investors won’t succeed by guessing when quantum technology becomes mainstream. They will succeed by watching how aggressively governments choose to fund and support these companies — because policy momentum, not product launches, will drive quantum stocks.You can see the complete list of today’s Zacks #1 Rank (Strong Buy) stocks here.Zacks' Research Chief Names "Stock Most Likely to Double"Our team of experts has just released the 5 stocks with the greatest probability of gaining +100% or more in the coming months. Of those 5, Director of Research Sheraz Mian highlights the one stock set to climb highest.This top pick is a little-known satellite-based communications firm. Space is projected to become a trillion dollar industry, and this company's customer base is growing fast. Analysts have forecasted a major revenue breakout in 2025. Of course, all our elite picks aren't winners but this one could far surpass earlier Zacks' Stocks Set to Double like Hims & Hers Health, which shot up +209%.Free: See Our Top Stock And 4 Runners UpWant the latest recommendations from Zacks Investment Research? Today, you can download 7 Best Stocks for the Next 30 Days. Click to get this free report Quantum Computing Inc. (QUBT): Free Stock Analysis Report IonQ, Inc. (IONQ): Free Stock Analysis Report Rigetti Computing, Inc. (RGTI): Free Stock Analysis Report D-Wave Quantum Inc. (QBTS): Free Stock Analysis ReportThis article originally published on Zacks Investment Research (zacks.com).Zacks Investment ResearchWeiter zum vollständigen Artikel bei Zacks
Übrigens: IonQ und andere US-Aktien sind bei finanzen.net ZERO sogar bis 23 Uhr handelbar (ohne Ordergebühren, zzgl. Spreads). Jetzt kostenlos Depot eröffnen und Neukunden-Bonus sichern!
Ausgewählte Hebelprodukte auf IonQ
Mit Knock-outs können spekulative Anleger überproportional an Kursbewegungen partizipieren. Wählen Sie einfach den gewünschten Hebel und wir zeigen Ihnen passende Open-End Produkte auf IonQ
Der Hebel muss zwischen 2 und 20 liegen
| Name | Hebel | KO | Emittent |
|---|
| Name | Hebel | KO | Emittent |
|---|
Quelle: Zacks