Quantum computing firm reaches $10bn valuation as investor interest builds

A picture


A British quantum computing entrepreneur has doubled the value of his stake in the business he founded to $2bn (£1.5bn), after the company achieved a $10bn valuation in its latest fundraising.Ilyas Khan, 63, is the founder of Quantinuum, a UK-US firm that announced on Thursday it had raised $600m as investor interest builds in the cutting-edge technology.Khan set up Quantinuum’s predecessor company, Cambridge Quantum, in 2014 before it merged with the US-based Honeywell Quantum Solutions in 2021.Khan, a former owner of his home town’s football club Accrington Stanley, is now chief product officer at the business and to date has not sold any shares since founding it more than a decade ago.

He owns a stake of about 20%, with the US conglomerate Honeywell controlling 54%.New investors in the funding round include the chip maker Nvidia and US venture capital firm QED.Excitement over the potential for quantum computing, and the companies at the forefront of its development, has been building amid a series of technological breakthroughs, with the UK government setting a target of 2035 to develop quantum systems capable of outperforming conventional supercomputers.Quantum computing has the potential to power breakthroughs in a wide range of areas, from drug discovery to artificial intelligence, owing to its ability to carry out far bigger calculations than conventional computer systems.However, experts have said it has the ability to crack high-level encryption, which has prompted calls for governments and companies to adopt quantum-proof cryptography.

However, the technology still needs to develop, and become more stable, before it can achieve transformative breakthroughs.Classical computers encode their information in bits – represented as a 0 or a 1 – that are transmitted as an electrical pulse.A text message, email or even a Netflix film streamed on a smartphone is a string of these bits.In quantum computers, however, the information is contained in a quantum bit, or qubit.These qubits, encased in a modestly sized chip, are particles such as electrons or photons that can be in several states at the same time, a property of quantum physics known as superposition.

Sign up to TechScapeA weekly dive in to how technology is shaping our livesafter newsletter promotionThis means qubits can encode various combinations of 1s and 0s at the same time – and compute their way through vast numbers of different outcomes.However, they have to be kept in a highly controlled environment, such as being kept free from electromagnetic interference, or else they can be easily disrupted.Rajeeb Hazra, Quantinuum’s chief executive, said its new funding would “strengthen the entire quantum ecosystem”.Quantinuum produces a full range of quantum technologies, from hardware to the algorithms and software that power its systems.Its customers include government institutions and, in the private sector, companies such as the banking groups JP Morgan and HSBC.

With HSBC, it helps banks solve particularly challenging problems in areas such as fraud detection and cybersecurity.It also helps simulate new materials and molecular structures for pharmaceutical companiesThe UK’s science minister, Lord Vallance, said the $10bn valuation was “a vote of confidence in quantum’s transformative potential, and the speed of progress in putting quantum to work, here in the UK”.
recentSee all
A picture

Anglo American agrees mining mega merger; Londoners face commuting struggles as tube strike enters second day – business live

Friedrich Merz, the German chancellor, has called for “more flexibility” from Brussels in relation to targets for the transition to electric vehicles – siding with German car manufacturers and opening up a divide with other European carmakers who want to stick to the deadline for phasing out combustion engines. The bosses of Volvo and Polestar were among 150 car chiefs who wrote to the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen on Monday urging her to maintain the 2035 target for cars and vans and arguing that any change would hand an advantage to Chinese rivals.Michael Lohscheller, Polestar’s chief executive, said in a statement:Weakening targets now would send a signal that Europe can be talked out of its own commitments. That would not only harm the climate. It would harm Europe’s ability to compete

A picture

Anglo American to merge with rival Teck in $53bn mining group

The London-listed miner Anglo American has agreed to merge with its Canadian rival Teck Resources, in a deal that will create a $53bn (£39bn) global copper group but raises the prospect of job cuts.The merger, the biggest mining tie-up in years, would form one of the biggest copper producers in the world, the companies said on Monday.Anglo American fended off a series of takeover attempts by its larger rival BHP last year, pushing it to radically restructure its business.The chief executive of Anglo, Duncan Wanblad, said the merger formed “a global critical minerals champion with the focus, agility, capabilities and culture that have characterised both companies for so long”.“Having made such significant progress with Anglo American’s portfolio transformation … now is the optimal time to take this next strategic step to accelerate our growth,” he said

A picture

The women in love with AI chatbots: ‘I vowed to him that I wouldn’t leave him’

Experts are concerned about people emotionally depending on AI, but these women say their digital companions are misunderstoodThe Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link. Learn more.A young tattoo artist on a hiking trip in the Rocky Mountains cozies up by the campfire, as her boyfriend Solin describes the constellations twinkling above them: the spidery limbs of Hercules, the blue-white sheen of Vega.The Guardian’s journalism is independent

A picture

Apple to debut new, thinner iPhone at ‘awe-dropping’ annual product event

Expect Apple’s latest iPhone to look slimmer when it debuts on Tuesday. The company is slated to unveil its thinnest iPhone yet at its annual product showcase, promoted with the title “awe-dropping”. The event will take place at its Cupertino headquarters in the Steve Jobs Theater at 10am PT.Apple’s iPhone 17 lineup is expected to include standard, Pro, and Pro Max editions, along with a newcomer to the family, the iPhone Air. This newest edition of the iPhone is christened to be Apple’s lightest flagship phone to date in the lineage of its line of slim MacBook laptops, observers have predicted

A picture

Asa Tribe scores 200 for Glamorgan, Leicestershire v Gloucestershire and more: county cricket – live

DIVISION ONEChelmsford: Essex 49-1 v Durham 333Taunton: Somerset 229-4 v YorkshireThe Oval: Surrey 246 v Warwickshire 206-8Hove: Sussex 122 v Hampshire 226New Road: Worcestershire 182 v Nottinghamshire 119-4DIVISION TWOCanterbury: Kent 293 v Lancashire 118-3Grace Road: Leicestershire 40-1 v Gloucestershire 482Lord’s: Middlesex 106-3 v Derbyshire 283Northampton: Northants 2-0 v Glamorgan 467And Budinger parties no more, stumps akimbo. A wicket for Taylor. Leicestershire 35-1.Some beautiful, if streaky, boundary hitting by Budinger, who is has kept Gloucestershire on their toes but remains at the crease. Leicestershire 35-0

A picture

The Breakdown | England’s juggernaut must be wary of wheels coming off as World Cup stakes rise

It was the basketball great Kobe Bryant who best summed up the precarious status of the dead cert. His multi-talented LA Lakers team came into the 2004 NBA finals as clear favourites to beat the less fashionable Detroit Pistons only to lose 4-1 in the series. “Talent doesn’t get it done, you have to be able to execute,” reflected Bryant. “When you have talent and you execute, that’s when you win.”In other words there is no such thing in sport as an absolute certainty, no matter how good you are