Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnADVERTISEMENTEbube JonesTue, June 30, 2026 at 4:00 PM GMT+2 4 min readImage by Funtap via ShutterstockQuantum computing has gone from a niche science topic to a clear policy focus in a very short time. In late June, President Donald Trump signed a new executive order that sends more federal support toward quantum technologies. That kind of attention from Washington is now putting quantum stocks firmly on investors' radar. In this new market, one freshly listed company stands out for a very specific reason. More News from BarchartMemory Demand Sent Seagate Soaring — But This Stock Looks Even BetterNvidia Is Still a Bargain. Analysts See 57% Upside in NVDA Stock.Roblox Shows Huge, Unusual Call Option Activity - Is RBLX Stock Too Cheap?Tired of missing midday reversals? The FREE Barchart Brief newsletter keeps you in the know. Sign up now!Infleqtion (INFQ) is the only pure neutral atom name trading on public markets. Their stock has just picked up an "Outperform" rating from Wedbush with a double-digit upside target. For investors looking at this part of quantum for the first time, the real question is simple. Is this just another speculative deep tech bet, or one of the few early quantum names where being early might actually pay off? Let's find out.Infleqtion is a neutral atom quantum computing and sensing company based in Louis, Colorado, building full-stack systems for government and commercial customers in computing, timing, and navigation. The shares are down 11.41% year-to-date (YTD) since trading began on Feb. 17. www.barchart.comThis price works out to an equity value of $2.97 billion, with the market paying roughly 95.40 times trailing sales and 54.69 times cash flow compared with sector medians of 3.28 times and 18.75 times.The first quarter 2026 report, released in May, showed record Q1 revenue of $9.5 million, up 14% from the prior year and coming entirely from quantum-related activity. The company's most recent earnings were ‑0.09 per share, reported on May 14.That update also confirmed a GAAP operating loss of $33.6 million and a narrower non‑GAAP operating loss of $13.2 million after backing out stock‑based compensation, acquisition costs, and public expenses. It also highlighted net cash used in operations of $19.2 million with only $0.3 million in capital expenditures. This step up in operating cash burn from $7 million a year earlier was driven mainly by higher accounts receivable as larger contracts started to ramp.The same release noted that cash, cash equivalents, and available-for-sale securities stood at a solid $569 million on March 31, while per-share losses improved to $0.26 from $0.41 even though gross profit slipped to $1.9 million from $3.4 million.Terms and Privacy PolicyEU DSA contactPrivacy & Cookie SettingsMore Info