Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang speaks during the launch of the supercomputer Gefion at Vilhelm Lauritzen Terminal in Kastrup, Denmark, Oct. 23, 2024.
Ritzau Scanpix | Mads Claus Rasmussen | Via Reuters
Quantum computing stocks dropped Wednesday after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang declared that useful quantum computers are many years away.
“If you said 15 years for very useful quantum computers, that would probably be on the early side,” he said during Nvidia’s analyst day. “If you said 30, it’s probably on the late side. But if you picked 20, I think a whole bunch of us would believe it.”
Huang said he believes Nvidia will play a “very significant part” in creating the computers and helping the industry “get there as fast as possible.”
Rigetti falls on comments for Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang
Stocks tied to quantum computing tumbled on the heels of the comments, with Rigetti Computing plunging 47%, while IonQ shed 44%. D-Wave Quantum dropped more than 44%, while the Defiance Quantum & AI ETF fell 5%. Quantum Computing, which announced a stock offering to raise $100 million, sank 47%.
“As valuations have become a bit lofty, we’re not surprised by today’s correction,” said AXS Investments CEO Greg Bassuk, calling the reaction somewhat “overblown.”
“Broad consensus has long been that quantum computing’s mass appeal is years away so there is no real news underpinning today’s negative news,” he added.
Shares over the last year
The sector received a boost into the end of 2024 as excitement around quantum computing exploded after Google revealed its latest Willow chip, which it said performed better than its 2019 predecessor at reducing errors. Many investors also hoped that the sector would be the next big technology craze since the rise of AI in the wake of ChatGPT.
The excitement boosted shares into year-end, with Rigetti and D-Wave rallying 1,449% and 854%, respectively.
Supporters of quantum computing say the technology will be able to perform computing tasks regular computers can’t, and process far larger volumes of data. But many investors have warned that it may be too early to rule out proper winners in the sector and real-world use cases.