1 Quantum Computing Stock That Has Crushed the S&P 500 Index This Year -- Should Investors Jump Aboard or Run for the Hills?

In This Article:

Key Points

  • Quantum computers can quickly solve certain complex problems that are beyond the reach of conventional computers.

  • Investors are betting that this innovative technology could spark growth similar to the artificial intelligence trend.

  • Quantum computing upstart D-Wave has crushed the broader market this year, and the tech company seems to be leading its industry in terms of innovation.

  • 10 stocks we like better than D-Wave Quantum ›

The benchmark S&P 500 index hasn't had the best 2025 so far. It's essentially flat year to date as of May 29, but along the way, it has experienced extreme turbulence, falling by close to 20% from highs made in late February, only to recoup most of those losses. Still, even in times of underperformance and uncertainty, there are always pockets of the market that do well.

Savvy investors will look in the nooks and crannies of the market to find hidden opportunities and generate alpha. One sector that has been captivating some of them is quantum computing -- an umbrella term for an innovative type of tech that capitalizes on the unusual ways that matter behaves at a subatomic scale to create machines capable of solving enormously complex problems that even powerful traditional computers can't. One quantum computing stock, in particular, has crushed the S&P 500 this year. Should investors buy it or run for the hills?

From academic to enterprise-driven

Classical computers store and process data in bits -- the most basic binary units of information. They can have a value of either zero or one. Quantum computers process and store data in an entirely different way, using qubits, which can also have values that are probability amplitudes -- complex weighted combinations of those zero and one states. Setting aside the fiendishly complicated hows and whys, using qubits to run calculations allows quantum computers to rapidly get answers to certain unusual types of problems that would take years or even centuries for a classical supercomputer.

But the optimistic view of quantum computing is similar to the outlook on artificial intelligence (AI) -- such machines could have a vast array of use cases if developers can get the technology to the level that experts think is possible.

Person looking at monitors in dimly-lit room.
Image source: Getty Images.

While researchers have been working on various paths toward this technology for many years, it's still a pretty novel concept for the general public and most retail investors. Plus, the expert view is that we're still far away from reaching quantum computing's full potential or commercializing the tech broadly.