D-Wave Quantum (NYSE:QBTS) came public through a SPAC merger in August 2022 as a niche pioneer in quantum annealing, a narrower approach than the gate-model systems that dominate headlines. For its first two years on the tape, the story was patient commercialization: signing Forbes Global 2000 customers, shipping the Advantage2 platform, and burning cash while the rest of the quantum sector chased qubits.
The pivot came in 2025-2026. D-Wave acquired Quantum Circuits, Inc., adding dual-rail superconducting qubits with gate fidelities exceeding 99.9%, and now markets itself as the only player pursuing both annealing and gate-model systems. CEO Alan Baratz laid out a roadmap targeting 1,000 physical qubits with 10 logical qubits by 2030 and a 100,000-qubit Advantage3 annealing machine. FY2025 revenue hit $24.59 million, up 178.54% YoY, and Q1 2026 bookings rocketed to $33.40 million.
Your $1,000 at IPO Is Now $2,352
D-Wave has only traded publicly since August 2022, so the available history covers roughly four years.
1-Year Return
- Initial Investment: $1,000
- Current Value: $1,310.30
- Total Return: 31.03%
- S&P 500 (same period): $1,229.10 (22.91%)
Since IPO (August 2022)
- Initial Investment: $1,000
- Current Value: $2,352
- Total Return: 135.2%
- S&P 500 (same period): $1,779.60 (77.96%)
That headline number hides a brutal ride. QBTS opened near $10, sank into the low single digits during 2023, then ripped to a 52-week high of $46.75 before settling at $23.52. Holders who bought at IPO and never flinched doubled their money and beat the S&P. Anyone who chased the recent top is down meaningfully, including a 21.36% drop just this past week. Timing mattered enormously here.
The Case For and Against Putting $1,000 In Today
I’d put $1,000 into D-Wave today if I believe quantum computing reaches commercial scale this decade and that owning the only dual-platform pure-play is worth a price-to-sales ratio of roughly 710. The bull case rests on bookings up roughly 2,000% YoY, a $588 million cash pile, defense traction with Anduril and Davidson Technologies, and analyst targets sitting at $36.44.
I’d avoid it if I cannot stomach $45 million in quarterly operating cash burn, a share count that ballooned from 266.6 million to 358.7 million, and revenue that swung down 81% YoY in Q1 on one missing system sale. The gate-model roadmap stretches to 2032 for meaningful logical qubits, and competitors are not standing still.
Personally, I lean toward a small starter position rather than a full $1,000. The technology story is real, but at a $8.84 billion market cap on $12.4 million in trailing revenue, you are paying for a future that may take six more years to arrive.