Rigetti Has a $6 Billion Market Cap and $7 Million in Revenue. Here Are the Two Stocks Worth Owning Instead

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By Alex Sirois Published

Quick Read

  • Google (GOOG) funds quantum research through hyperscaler economics—$20.03B quarterly cloud revenue, $175-185B capex, and real earnings make it the quantum play with durability.

  • IonQ (IONQ) delivers the pure-play quantum story Rigetti promised: $64.67M quarterly revenue growing 755% year-over-year with enterprise partnerships at scale.

  • The analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 stocks and Google wasn't one of them. Get them here FREE.

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Rigetti Has a $6 Billion Market Cap and $7 Million in Revenue. Here Are the Two Stocks Worth Owning Instead

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Rigetti Computing (NASDAQ:RGTI) keeps grabbing quantum computing headlines on the strength of its 108-qubit Cepheus-1-108Q system and a cash-stuffed balance sheet. But here’s what you should actually be watching.

The numbers underneath the story are ugly. Rigetti carries a $6.34 billion market cap against full-year 2025 revenue of just $7.09 million, which itself declined 34.31% year over year. The recent $33.11 million GAAP “profit” is an accounting mirage produced by a $53.70 million favorable swing in derivative warrant liabilities, not by selling quantum hardware. Strip that out and the company posted a $26.00 million operating loss against just $4.40 million of quarterly revenue. Rigetti has missed consensus revenue for four straight quarters, including a 21.68% Q4 2025 shortfall.

The market has noticed. A Q3 2025 earnings beat still produced a -17.71% 30-day return, blunting optimism around its story. Rigetti’s own filings warn that “continued significant operating losses” will persist and that fault-tolerant quantum computing remains a “longer-term objective with uncertain timeline.” That is the company telling you the thesis is a decade away.

A measured quantum allocation is available right now in two names already doing real work.

Google: The Market Shaper

Alphabet (NASDAQ:GOOG | GOOG Price Prediction) brings hyperscaler economics to the quantum thesis. Google Cloud printed $20.03 billion in quarterly revenue, up 63% year over year, with backlog nearly doubling sequentially to over $460 billion. That cash machine funds the Willow quantum chip, the Quantum AI division, and AI infrastructure simultaneously, with $175 billion to $185 billion in planned capital expenditures backing the buildout. Alphabet shapes the standards, owns the distribution with 350 million paid subscriptions and 750 million-plus Gemini monthly users, and trades at roughly 16x earnings with a 35.7% return on equity, a 3.5% free cash flow yield, and a recently raised dividend. The profile offers quantum optionality alongside income and cash-flow durability.

IonQ: The Pure-Play Leader

For investors who want a dedicated quantum name, IonQ (NYSE:IONQ) operates at a different altitude than Rigetti. Quarterly revenue reached $64.67 million, growing 755% year over year, with full-year guidance of $260 million to $270 million. That is roughly fifteen times Rigetti’s quarterly run rate. IonQ’s trapped-ion architecture, enterprise partnerships, and commercial scale give it the leadership profile in pure-play quantum that headline-chasing peers cannot match. Dilution and EBITDA losses remain real risks to weigh against the growth profile. As the quantum slot inside a diversified sleeve, it is the credible leader.

The Setup

Rigetti’s chart tells the rest. Shares have round-tripped from a yearly high near $58 to $19.07, leaving holders with a 13.91% year-to-date loss while consensus revenue kept slipping. IonQ has climbed 94.06% over the past month, and Alphabet has compounded 141.35% over the past year on real earnings rather than warrant swings.

The setup is straightforward: Rigetti’s fundamentals lag its valuation, while Alphabet pairs cash-flow scale with quantum optionality and IonQ offers the clearest pure-play revenue ramp in the group.

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About the Author Alex Sirois →

Alex Sirois is a financial writer with experience spanning both retail and institutional investing. He has written for InvestorPlace and held roles at BNY Mellon and Bernstein, giving him a perspective that bridges Main Street portfolios and Wall Street analysis.

Alex holds an MBA from George Washington University and has built his career across multiple industries, including e-commerce, education, and translation — a breadth of experience that informs how he breaks down complex financial topics for everyday investors. His writing is conversational, actionable, and grounded in long-term, buy-and-hold investing principles.

At 247 Wall St., Alex focuses on delivering analysis that is both accessible and useful, with a clear emphasis on helping readers make more informed decisions with their money.

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