IBM surged more than 11% on Thursday after the US Department of Commerce announced a $2 billion CHIPS and Science Act program to fund domestic quantum computing companies.
International Business Machines Corporation, IBM
IBM stock was trading around $253.84 by close on Friday, up roughly 17% for the week.
The rally added about $26 billion to IBM’s market cap, lifting it to approximately $237.8 billion. The stock added a further 3% in premarket trading on Friday.
IBM landed the single largest allocation in the program — a $1 billion government grant. The company will match that with $1 billion of its own capital.
The combined $2 billion will be used to build “Anderon,” a new company and facility in Albany, New York. It’s being positioned as the first pure-play, dedicated 300mm quantum chip manufacturing foundry in the United States.
The Department of Commerce will also take a small minority stake in Anderon, though the exact size has not been disclosed.
The total $2 billion was spread across nine quantum computing companies, but IBM was the clear standout recipient.
Analyst Amit Daryanani at Evercore ISI called the news a positive for IBM and said it should “reflect confidence in their quantum roadmap.”
He noted IBM already has a quantum book of business worth more than $1 billion in total signings since inception, and that it’s growing each quarter.
Daryanani also highlighted IBM’s vertically integrated approach — covering processors, cryogenic systems, software through its Qiskit platform, and real-world partnerships.
IBM has projected that quantum computing could generate $850 billion in economic value globally by 2040.
Separately, IBM also made moves in AI-powered cybersecurity this week. The company announced a high-profile AI developer joined Project Glasswing, its cybersecurity industry consortium.
It also launched IBM Autonomous Security, a new multi-agent AI service aimed at strengthening its security product line.
Those developments added another layer to an already busy week for the company.
One thing worth keeping in mind: Anderon still has to be built. Revenue from quantum operations remains years away, and the foundry is still in early stages.
IBM’s 52-week range sits between $212.34 and $324.90, with the stock now trading near the middle of that band following this week’s move.
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