Quantinuum, Honeywell’s quantum computing unit, made its public market debut on June 4 on the Nasdaq under the ticker “QNT,” raising $1.68bn in the process.
Quantinuum Inc. Class A Common Stock (QNT)
The company priced its IPO at $60 per share, selling 28 million shares. That came in above the previously indicated range of $53 to $55.
The stock opened at $68, a 13.3% jump from the IPO price. By the close of its debut session, Quantinuum’s market cap stood at $17.63bn.
J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley acted as joint lead book-running managers on the deal, alongside Jefferies, Evercore ISI, and several others.
Underwriters were also granted a 30-day option to purchase up to an additional 4.2 million shares to cover over-allotments at the IPO price.
The IPO lands at a time when investor appetite for quantum computing has been strong. IonQ (IONQ) has gained around 52% this year, putting its market cap near $25.47bn — well ahead of where Quantinuum opened.
Quantinuum describes itself as a full-stack quantum computing company, offering a platform for real-world quantum deployment. Its systems are built on a QCCD architecture and, according to the company, achieved the highest average two-qubit gate fidelity in the sector as of December 31, 2025.
Its customers span pharmaceuticals, materials science, financial services, and government sectors. The company operates out of Broomfield, Colorado, with facilities in the US, UK, Germany, Japan, Qatar, and Singapore.
Quantinuum was formed in late 2021 through the merger of Honeywell Quantum Solutions and Cambridge Quantum.
In September 2025, Honeywell raised roughly $600m for Quantinuum at a pre-money valuation of $10bn. That funding was earmarked for large-scale quantum development and the launch of the next-generation Helios system, which launched in November 2025.
Just ahead of the IPO, Quantinuum announced a non-binding MOU with Mitsubishi Electric. The two companies plan to explore quantum use cases in industrial engineering and design, with early projects targeting computer-aided engineering and simulation.
In May 2025, Quantinuum also signed a letter of intent with the US Department of Commerce’s CHIPS R&D Office. The document outlines potential federal funding for fault-tolerant trapped-ion quantum computers.
That plan involves collaboration with suppliers including GlobalFoundries and Monarch Quantum to develop semiconductor and photonic components.
The IPO closed, as expected, on June 5, 2026.
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