IonQ, IBM, and Microsoft are the three names investors are watching most closely in quantum computing right now. The global market for quantum computing was valued at $1.42 billion in 2024 and is projected to reach $4.24 billion by 2030.
That growth is pulling in enterprise customers, government contracts, and fresh investment capital across the sector.
IonQ is one of the few pure-play quantum companies publicly traded. Its system recently recorded 99.99% fidelity in a standard accuracy test, which is a world record for the industry.
IonQ, Inc., IONQ
Accuracy is one of the biggest barriers to real-world quantum use. A system that makes frequent errors cannot be trusted for most practical applications.
IonQ uses trapped ion computing, which trades some speed for higher precision. This is a different approach from superconducting systems used by other players in the market.
The company plans to release a 256-qubit system this year. Its longer-term target is millions of qubits by 2030. IonQ’s systems are available through Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud. Its market cap currently sits around $11 billion.
IBM is not racing for qubit counts alone. Its focus is on getting quantum systems to work inside the technology stacks that large businesses already use.
International Business Machines Corporation, IBM
The company is building hybrid systems where traditional processors and quantum chips work together. That approach is widely seen as the most practical route to near-term commercial use.
IBM received a Smart Score of 10 out of 10 on TipRanks, the platform’s highest rating. Analysts rate it a Moderate Buy with a projected upside of 40.49%.
IBM already has a large enterprise customer base, which gives it an existing market to sell quantum services into as the technology matures.
Microsoft has been quieter about its quantum progress than some rivals, but its Majorana 1 chip is producing real results. The chip is currently being used in chemistry research to model complex molecular interactions.
CEO Satya Nadella has described quantum computing as the next major accelerator for cloud services. Microsoft is building on topological qubits, a long-term approach aimed at greater system stability.
Its Azure Quantum platform already brings quantum tools into enterprise workflows. Analysts rate Microsoft a Strong Buy with 56.62% upside potential. Its TipRanks Smart Score stands at 8 out of 10.
Separately, Google’s parent company Alphabet published a research paper in 2025 claiming it developed an algorithm that could break current blockchain encryption within minutes, potentially as soon as 2029.
That finding points to how fast quantum capabilities are advancing beyond the lab.
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