Quantinuum, the quantum computing company majority-owned by Honeywell, priced its IPO at $60 per share on June 3, raising $1.68 billion and landing a $15.6 billion valuation. The company began trading under the ticker QNT on the Nasdaq Global Market the following day.
The original fundraising target was $1.05 billion. Quantinuum blew past that by more than 60%, upsizing the offering to 28 million shares and pricing above its initial range of $53 to $55.
From private darling to public debut
Quantinuum raised a $300 million round at a $5 billion pre-money valuation, then followed that with a $600 million private funding round in September 2025 at a $10 billion valuation. The IPO effectively added another 56% on top of that September figure, pushing the company to $15.6 billion, well above its pre-IPO target of $12.7 billion.
The company was born in 2021 from the merger of Honeywell Quantum Solutions and Cambridge Quantum Computing. Honeywell brought the hardware expertise and trapped-ion quantum processors, while Cambridge Quantum contributed software and algorithm capabilities.
Government tailwinds at the perfect time
On May 21, roughly two weeks before pricing, the US government announced a $2 billion quantum initiative. Quantinuum is set to receive $100 million from that program.
What this means for investors
The sector has previously been dominated by SPAC mergers (IonQ went public via SPAC in 2021) and private fundraising rounds. A traditional IPO raising nearly $1.7 billion with genuine institutional demand is a different animal entirely.
IonQ, Rigetti Computing, and D-Wave Quantum are all publicly traded, but none have the combination of Honeywell’s backing, government funding commitments, and the scale of capital that Quantinuum now commands. That $1.68 billion war chest, plus the $100 million in federal funding, gives Quantinuum roughly $1.78 billion in fresh capital to deploy on R&D, talent acquisition, and commercialization efforts.
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