IonQ had what its CEO called the “biggest quarter” in the company’s history. The numbers backed that up. Yet the stock dropped anyway — and that tells you something about where quantum sits in the market right now.
IONQ closed Wednesday’s session up 9.5%, riding a broader tech rally. Then the earnings dropped. Revenue came in at $64.7 million for Q1, up 55% year-over-year and well above the $49.8 million analysts had expected. Still, the stock fell more than 6% in after-hours trading.
IonQ, Inc., IONQ
The adjusted loss per share came in at 34 cents, narrower than the 46-cent loss Wall Street had penciled in. The beat was clean across the top line. Guidance was raised. And yet, sellers showed up.
That gap between results and reaction is a familiar story for quantum names. Investors came in with high expectations after the pre-earnings run-up, and even a strong beat wasn’t enough to push the stock higher after hours.
Commercial traction was one of the more encouraging details in the report. More than 60% of Q1 revenue came from business clients, and over a third came from customers buying more than one IonQ product. That kind of cross-selling activity suggests the company is building real enterprise relationships, not just one-off contracts.
Remaining performance obligations — essentially signed contracts for future work — jumped 554% to $470 million. That’s the figure that drove the guidance raise. IonQ now expects $260–$270 million in full-year 2026 revenue, versus the prior call of $235 million.
The net income number — $805.4 million — looks striking, but it was heavily influenced by a change in the fair value of warrant debt. On an adjusted basis, IonQ still posted an EBITDA loss of $96.8 million. The company is growing fast, but it’s spending fast too.
Cash, cash equivalents, and investments ended the quarter at $3.1 billion, giving IonQ a long runway. But investors will keep a close eye on how quickly the business can close the gap between revenue growth and profitability.
One deal that stood out: IonQ sold its first sixth-generation, 256-qubit system to the University of Cambridge. The agreement covers quantum compute, network, sensing, and data safety — a multi-product deal that fits IonQ’s platform strategy.
Peer stocks also slipped after IonQ’s report. D-Wave Quantum fell 2.8% in premarket and Rigetti Computing dropped 3.9%, suggesting the after-hours move was more about sector sentiment than company-specific concerns.
Wall Street’s stance on IONQ remains constructive. Of 11 analysts covering the stock, eight rate it a Buy and three a Hold. The average price target sits at $58.50, implying around 11% upside from current levels.
IonQ also recently signed a deal with Horizon Quantum, which agreed to purchase one of IonQ’s systems as a testbed for quantum software development.
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