Infleqtion (INFQ) stock closed up about 5% on Monday at $14.21, then continued climbing in pre-market trading Tuesday, rising another 5% at the time of writing.
Infleqtion, Inc., INFQ
The moves came after President Trump signed two executive orders on June 22, directing the federal government to accelerate quantum technology across computing, sensing, and networking. A second order calls for faster migration of federal systems to post-quantum cryptography.
One of the orders establishes a national effort to develop the first quantum computer powerful enough to open what the White House describes as “the era of quantum-enabled scientific discovery.”
Infleqtion operates as a neutral-atom quantum technology company with established U.S. government contracts, placing it directly in the path of the new federal procurement push.
On top of the policy news, Infleqtion announced the launch of America’s Quantum Space Initiative — a new coalition focused on advancing quantum technologies for space applications.
Founding members include Voyager Technologies, Armada, Monarch Quantum, and the University of Colorado Boulder. The initiative will target quantum sensing, timing, communications, navigation, and computing for commercial, civil, and defense space use cases.
The company pointed to existing NASA work as evidence of real-world progress — Infleqtion contributed to NASA’s Cold Atom Laboratory on the International Space Station and is a partner on the Quantum Gravity Gradiometer Pathfinder mission, expected to become the world’s first quantum gravity sensor in space.
In May, Infleqtion signed a letter of intent with the U.S. Commerce Department’s CHIPS research office for up to $100 million in proposed milestone-based funding.
That funding is intended to support large-scale neutral-atom quantum computers, optical systems, and error-correction work — the core building blocks of Infleqtion’s technology platform.
The combination of the executive orders, the coalition launch, and the CHIPS funding letter created a convergence of catalysts that investors responded to positively.
It’s worth noting that the broader market did not provide much of a tailwind. The S&P 500 fell 0.4% and the Nasdaq dropped 1.3% on Monday, meaning Infleqtion’s gain came against a headwind for tech.
Analyst coverage on INFQ remains thin. Only two analysts have issued ratings in the past three months, with an average price target of $21.
That implies around 47% upside from Monday’s close of $14.21.
Infleqtion’s neutral-atom platform spans computing, sensing, and software — a broader footprint than pure-play quantum computing names, which may be part of why investors are treating it differently from the rest of the sector.
Quantum space applications are still early-stage, and meaningful revenue from that market could be years away. But the policy environment and the CHIPS funding pipeline give Infleqtion a clearer near-term path than many of its peers.
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