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Quantum Computing Sector

Quantum computing is a pre-commercial technology that uses quantum mechanical effects to solve problems impossible for classical computers. Stocks in this space are highly speculative -- most companies have minimal revenue and depend on research contracts.


How quantum computing works (simply)

Classical computers use bits (0 or 1). Quantum computers use qubits, which can be 0, 1, or both simultaneously (superposition). This lets them process exponentially more combinations at once -- making them theoretically ideal for cryptography, drug discovery, and optimization.

Current state of the technology

We are in the 'NISQ era' -- Noisy Intermediate-Scale Quantum.
  Current machines (100-1000 qubits) are too error-prone for commercial advantage.
  Fault-tolerant quantum computing (millions of logical qubits) is 5-15 years away.
  Google's 'Willow' chip in 2024 solved a specific benchmark faster -- not yet practical.

Trading quantum stocks

IONQ, RGTI, QUBT are speculative micro/small caps -- extreme volatility.
  IBM and GOOGL have quantum divisions but it's a tiny part of revenue.
  These stocks move on headlines (government contracts, research papers).
  Keep position sizes very small (max 1-2% of portfolio) given the risk.

✓ Quick Tips
  • Treat quantum stocks as speculative bets, not investments -- size accordingly.
  • A government or enterprise contract announcement can double a quantum stock in a day.
  • IONQ is the most liquid pure-play quantum stock; tightest spreads for trading.
  • Google and IBM are safer ways to get quantum exposure with much lower risk.

Related: AI & Machine Learning Sectorsector_technologyPosition Sizing

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