November was brutal for quantum computing investors. After riding a wave of speculative enthusiasm through most of 2024, the sector's pure-play stocks hit a wall. IonQ, Inc. (IONQ), Rigetti Computing, Inc. (RGTI), D-Wave Quantum, Inc. (QBTS), and Quantum Computing Inc. (QUBT) all experienced sharp corrections that left investors wondering if the quantum future might still be a bit too far away.
When the Music Stopped
These stocks had been absolute rockets for much of the year, but November brought them crashing back toward reality. The damage was significant across the board:
- IonQ plunged roughly 25% from its October high, trading well off its recent peak of over $82, despite posting triple-digit revenue growth.
- Rigetti fell sharply, declining around 40% from its early November price.
- D-Wave experienced significant volatility, ultimately dropping by more than 30% during the month.
- Quantum Computing was also hit hard, falling over 25% as it grappled with market skepticism and corporate challenges.
The pattern was clear: what goes up very fast on hope can come down even faster when reality intrudes.
The Problem With Selling the Future
The November selloff wasn't just random volatility. It reflected some very real structural problems that finally caught up with the sector:
Fundamentals: Here's the thing about quantum computing companies—they don't really make money yet. We're talking minimal revenue and deep net losses across the board. That created an awkward situation where market caps soared into the billions while actual business fundamentals remained, shall we say, theoretical. Price-to-Sales ratios climbed so high they made even the most optimistic tech valuations look conservative.
Dilution and Cash Burn: Running a quantum computing company is expensive. Really expensive. These firms burn through cash at an alarming rate, which means they constantly need to raise more capital. IonQ completed a massive equity offering during the period, and Quantum Computing stock faced pressure from plans to issue more shares. For existing shareholders, this meant one thing: dilution. More shares outstanding means your slice of the pie gets smaller, and investors started doing the math.
Risk-Off Sentiment: Quantum stocks are extraordinarily sensitive to broader market sentiment. When investors feel adventurous, these stocks fly. When the mood shifts and capital starts flowing toward safer bets, quantum names get hammered. November saw exactly that rotation, as enthusiasm for high-growth, unprofitable tech stocks faded and money moved elsewhere. The selling pressure built on itself, creating the kind of downward spiral that makes chart watchers wince.
The November correction serves as a reminder that the quantum computing market remains highly speculative. Investors are essentially betting on decades of potential rather than quarters of profit—and when that bet gets repriced, the adjustment can be painful.