Could Rigetti Computing Become the Next Nvidia?

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Over the past 10 years, a $1,000 investment in Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) would have grown to roughly $265,840. A large portion of that rally was fueled by its soaring sales of data center GPUs for processing AI tasks.

Unlike CPUs, which only process a single piece of data at a time, GPUs can process a wide range of integers and floating point numbers simultaneously. That key advantage, along with Nvidia’s leadership of the discrete GPU market, made it the linchpin of the booming AI market.

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From fiscal 2014 to fiscal 2024 (which ended in January 2024), Nvidia’s revenue grew at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 31%. Analysts expect its revenue to rise at a CAGR of 56% from fiscal 2024 to fiscal 2027 as the AI market expands.

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Nvidia is still growing rapidly, but it’s already the world’s second-most valuable company, with a market cap of $3.35 trillion. Therefore, investors looking for even bigger gains might want to seek out small-cap companies in nascent growth industries instead of chasing Nvidia at its record highs.

One of those little companies might be Rigetti Computing (NASDAQ: RGTI), a $335 million quantum computing stock that has rallied nearly 80% this year. Let’s see if it has the potential to become the “next Nvidia” of its quantum computing niche.

Traditional computers process data through binary “bits” of zeros and ones, while quantum computers store zeros and ones simultaneously in “qubits” to process data at much faster rates. That’s a big upgrade, but quantum systems are still massive, expensive, and make more mistakes than binary computers.

To address those challenges, many companies are trying to miniaturize quantum processing units (QPUs) and improve their error correction standards. As those technologies improve, Fortune Business Insights expects the quantum computing market to expand at a robust CAGR of 34.8% from 2024 to 2032.

Chad Rigetti, a physicist who previously worked on quantum computers at IBM, founded Rigetti Computing in 2013. It designs and manufactures quantum integrated circuits for quantum computers, and it enables developers to write their own quantum algorithms on its Forest cloud platform. That all-in-one business model makes it a “full-stack” quantum computing company.

Many full-stack quantum computing services operate within the walls of big tech companies like Alphabet‘s Google, IBM, and Alibaba instead of stand-alone companies. That’s because quantum computing hardware is expensive to manufacture, operate, and maintain. Yet those challenges didn’t stop Rigetti from going public by merging with a special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) in March 2022.

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