Trump Bets $2 Billion on Quantum Computing — IBM Takes $1 Billion, Rigetti and D-Wave Surge 25%
The Trump administration announced $2 billion across nine quantum computing companies, with IBM taking roughly $1 billion. Rigetti and D-Wave each surged 25%. Following Intel's $8.9 billion CHIPS Act investment, the administration's pattern of government as industrial capital allocator has now reached quantum computing.

- The Trump administration committed $2 billion to nine quantum computing companies, with IBM taking ~$1 billion
- Following the $8.9B Intel CHIPS Act stake, the government-as-allocator pattern drove Rigetti and D-Wave up 25% each
The Trump administration announced $2 billion in investments across nine quantum computing companies. IBM takes the largest share at roughly $1 billion. Following the $8.9 billion Intel investment, the era of government as capital allocator in the private market has fully arrived.
When the Trump administration announced a $400 million stake in rare earths miner MP Materials last July, markets were stunned. A month later came an even bigger surprise: roughly $8.9 billion directed toward Intel. Over the past 10 months, the Trump administration has taken direct equity stakes in six publicly traded companies, not during a recession or national emergency, but as a matter of industrial policy. Now it's expanding that portfolio into quantum computing with $2 billion across nine companies.
IBM Emerges as the Biggest Quantum Winner
According to the Wall Street Journal, IBM takes roughly $1 billion of the $2 billion allocation. The rest is distributed across nine companies.
- IBM (NYSE: IBM) — approximately $1 billion, the largest recipient
- Rigetti Computing (RGTI) — approximately $100 million
- D-Wave Quantum (QBTS) — approximately $100 million
- GlobalFoundries (GFS) — among the beneficiaries
- Infleqtion (INFQ) — among the beneficiaries
Markets responded immediately. D-Wave and Rigetti each surged 25% on the announcement day. IBM gained 7.5%. MP Materials has doubled since its deal. Intel has rocketed 400%. Lithium Americas remains the lone outlier, down 13% since its deal was announced.
Why IBM — "The Safest Way for Taxpayers to Fund Quantum"
The investment logic for IBM is straightforward. Unlike most quantum startups that generate minimal revenue while burning cash each quarter, IBM runs a profitable enterprise business. It posted $67.5 billion in 2025 revenue and $14.7 billion in free cash flow. It already operates more than 100 quantum systems through the IBM Quantum Network, with decades of government and commercial relationships.
IBM may be the safest way for taxpayers to fund quantum development. The company has the balance sheet, research infrastructure, and commercial customer base to scale the technology beyond the laboratory stage.
247 Wall St.
Intel's Revival — How $8.9 Billion Changed Psychology
Intel's case shows how quickly government capital can alter market sentiment. Just a year ago, TSMC, Nvidia, AMD, and Broadcom were discussing a joint venture to buy Intel's struggling foundry business. Then Washington stepped in. The $8.9 billion investment reframed Intel from an AI also-ran into "America's semiconductor champion." Since the August 22 announcement, the stock has surged roughly 400%.
The New Risk — When Politics Enters the Boardroom
Government ownership changes incentives. Shareholders want returns. Governments want employment growth, domestic manufacturing, or geopolitical leverage. Those goals don't always align. There's also the question of what happens when political priorities shift. A future administration could redirect funding, pressure companies into unprofitable projects, or prioritize national interests over shareholder returns. Once Washington becomes a major stakeholder, politics enters the boardroom.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who receives the most from Trump's $2 billion quantum computing investment?
IBM takes the largest share at roughly $1 billion. Rigetti Computing and D-Wave Quantum each receive approximately $100 million, with GlobalFoundries and Infleqtion also among the beneficiaries.
How many private companies has the Trump administration directly invested in so far?
Over the past 10 months, the administration has taken direct equity stakes in six publicly traded companies: MP Materials ($400M), Intel ($8.9B), and now nine quantum computing companies ($2B total).
Why does IBM receive the largest quantum allocation?
IBM posted $67.5 billion in 2025 revenue and $14.7 billion in free cash flow, and already operates more than 100 quantum systems through the IBM Quantum Network. Unlike pure-play quantum startups burning cash, IBM has the scale and infrastructure to deploy capital effectively.
What has been Intel's stock performance since the government investment?
Since the $8.9 billion investment was announced on August 22, 2025, Intel's stock has surged approximately 400%. The government backing reframed Intel from an AI also-ran into America's semiconductor champion in the eyes of the market.
What are the risks of government equity stakes in public companies?
Government ownership can distort corporate incentives. Governments prioritize employment, domestic manufacturing, and geopolitical goals over shareholder returns. A future administration could redirect funding or pressure companies into unprofitable projects. Lithium Americas, down 13% since its deal, illustrates how quickly the dynamic can reverse.
Smart Money Briefing
Weekly summaries of Wall Street guru moves and crypto whale activity.









