Is IonQ Stock a Buy?

Date:

IonQ (NYSE: IONQ) has taken its investors on a wild ride over the past three years. The quantum computing startup went public by merging with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) on Oct. 1, 2021, and its stock opened at $10.60 on the first day. It soared as high as $31 the following month but sank to about $3 by December 2022.

Like many other SPAC-backed startups, IonQ disappointed its investors by missing its premerger targets and racked up steep losses. The departure of its cofounder and chief scientist and troubling allegations from a prolific short-seller raised more red flags.

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Image source: Getty Images.

But today, IonQ trades at a record high of nearly $33. A $10,000 investment at its all-time low two years ago would be worth about $110,000 today. Let’s see why IonQ bounced back and whether its stock is still worth chasing after that massive rally.

Traditional computers store data in binary bits of zeros and ones. Quantum computers store zeros and ones simultaneously in “qubits” to process more data at a faster rate, but those systems are much larger and pricier than regular servers. Furthermore, quantum computers tend to output more errors than binary computers.

To address those challenges, IonQ is developing a “trapped ion” technology that can shrink the average width of a quantum process unit from a few feet to a few inches. That miniaturization process could make its quantum computers much smaller, cheaper, and more accurate in the future.

IonQ mainly serves big government customers, including the U.S. Air Force Research Lab, and major universities. It sells three main products: its top-tier Aria quantum system, its commercial-oriented Forte system, and its on-premise Forte Enterprise system. It also serves up its own quantum computing power as a cloud-based service for customers who don’t want to install on-site systems.

Companies that go public through traditional IPOs aren’t allowed to set long-term revenue and earnings forecasts in their S-1 filings. However, companies that go public by merging with SPACs are allowed to provide long-term estimates.

As a result, many SPAC-backed companies overpromised and underdelivered. IonQ was one such company that missed its pre-merger expectations from 2021 to 2023.

Metric

2021

2022

2023

Pre-merger revenue estimate

$5 million

$15 million

$34 million

Actual revenue

$3 million

$11 million

$22 million

Data source: IonQ.

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