Wednesday, June 17, 2026 · U.S. Edition Today's Paper Latest Headlines
Advertisement SPONSORED
VANTAGE CAPITAL
Built for what comes next. Private banking for ambitious balance sheets.
Open an account
The Index Today.
Vol. III · No. 168 · Today's Front Page
Markets Pulse · live · what do these signals mean?
MARKETS PULSE
$ ▲ +0.0% MED 14s CONF 80.00
BREAKING
$ ▲ +0.0% MED 14s CONF 80.00
Uncategorized

Quantum Goes Vertical: IonQ Buys Chipmaker SkyWater in a $1.8 Billion Deal

Quantum computing firm IonQ has acquired semiconductor foundry SkyWater Technology for $1.8 billion, a bid to vertically integrate quantum chip production.

$▲ +0.0%MED 14s·CONF 80.00
$▲ +0.0%MED 14s·CONF 80.00
Execution price · last 6 hoursvia TimePay LPM
-6h-4h-2hnow
SettlementTimePay 30s spot·Cash $1.00·TPC 10 credits

The quantum computing race just took a decidedly industrial turn. IonQ, one of the sector’s leading firms, has acquired semiconductor foundry SkyWater Technology in a $1.8 billion deal, a move to vertically integrate the production of quantum chips. By bringing manufacturing in-house, IonQ is betting that controlling its own fabrication is key to winning the long, capital-intensive contest to build practical quantum machines.

The acquisition

The deal is strategic, not just financial. Buying a chip foundry gives IonQ direct control over how its quantum processors are made, rather than depending on outside manufacturers. At $1.8 billion, it is a substantial bet that owning the means of production will pay off in speed, quality and cost as quantum technology matures toward commercial use.

Why vertical integration

Control is the prize. Vertical integration lets a company optimize its entire stack — from chip design to fabrication — reducing reliance on third parties and protecting intellectual property. For cutting-edge hardware like quantum processors, owning the foundry can accelerate iteration and shield supply, advantages that loom large in a field still finding its footing.

The quantum race

Competition is heating up. Quantum computing promises to solve problems beyond the reach of today’s machines, and firms are racing to achieve practical, scalable systems. As the sector moves from research toward commercialization, manufacturing capability becomes a differentiator — and IonQ’s acquisition signals that the contest is entering a more industrial, capital-heavy phase.

Why it matters

The stakes are enormous. Quantum computing could transform fields from drug discovery to cryptography to materials science, and leadership in the technology carries strategic and economic weight. A move to secure manufacturing reflects how seriously players are positioning for a future where quantum capability becomes a genuine competitive and national advantage.

The challenges ahead

Quantum remains hard. Building reliable, scalable quantum computers is a formidable engineering challenge, and commercialization timelines are uncertain. Integrating a foundry is itself complex and costly. IonQ is wagering that vertical control improves its odds, but the path to practical quantum advantage is long, and execution risk is real.

The bottom line

IonQ’s $1.8 billion acquisition of SkyWater Technology marks a bold step toward vertically integrated quantum chip production, signaling that the quantum race is entering a more industrial phase. By owning its manufacturing, IonQ aims to control quality, speed and supply in a fiercely competitive field. Quantum computing’s promise remains distant and uncertain — but the contest to build it is intensifying, and the players are positioning for the long haul.

Opinion
Your Library 0
No articles purchased yet.
DZ
Demo User
ZZAZZ Member
TPC Balance
2,880TPC
Articles owned0
TimePay earned142 TPC
The Index Today.