New York, June 15, 2026, 14:02 EDT
- QTREX Quantum shares jumped sharply after the company said a major U.S. interconnect manufacturer moved its AME system from validation to production.
- The stock traded around $2.37, up about 84% from its previous close, with intraday volume above 91 million shares.
- The next test is whether the production-floor milestone turns into additional AME system orders, revenue, or strategic quantum-computing partnerships.
QTREX Quantum Ltd. shares surged Monday after the company said its Additively Manufactured Electronics, or AME, technology reached a 97% manufacturing yield at one of the largest U.S.-based interconnect manufacturers. AME refers to 3D-style manufacturing of electronic components, while yield means the share of produced units that pass required checks. QTREX said the customer moved its AME system from a development environment onto the production floor after hundreds of evaluations covering reliability, vibration, environmental exposure, humidity, assembly integration and yield performance. Chief Executive Dagi Ben-Noon called the move “a major commercial and technological milestone for QTREX.” GlobeNewswire
The stock reaction was dramatic. QTEX traded near $2.37 as of the latest quoted trade, up $1.08 from the previous close of $1.29, after touching an intraday high of $2.39 and low of $1.35. Volume was more than 91 million shares, far above normal for a micro-cap name, showing that the move was driven by active short-term trading as well as fresh interest in the company’s quantum hardware story.
The news matters because QTREX is trying to prove that its AME platform can move beyond prototypes and into real manufacturing use. Stocks often rise when new information increases expectations for future revenue, market adoption or strategic value; they fall when investors reassess execution risk, dilution, weak margins or excessive valuation. In QTREX’s case, the bull case is that production validation by a large interconnect manufacturer could support additional AME system sales and help position the company in quantum-computing infrastructure, where high-density, low-loss connectivity remains a hardware bottleneck. The company said it is advancing discussions on additional AME systems, manufacturing expansion and future commercial opportunities. GlobeNewswire
The bear case is just as important. QTREX is still early, small and financially risky. In 2025, when it was still operating as Inspira Technologies, the company reported only $289,000 in revenue, a net loss of $13.22 million and cash, cash equivalents and deposits of $3.16 million at year-end. A later SEC filing also registered up to 6.67 million ordinary shares for resale by a selling shareholder, which does not raise new proceeds for the company from those resales but can create supply pressure in the market.
The next major catalyst is conversion: investors will want to see whether Monday’s validation leads to signed AME orders, repeat purchases, named customers or measurable revenue. Another near-term event is Quantum.Tech World 2026 in Boston on June 25–26, where QTREX has said Chairman Tal Parnas and Chief Business Officer Yoav Rozanovich will present functional AME-based monolithic connectivity components and hold private meetings with industry leaders, research institutions and strategic partners. markets.businessinsider.com
Based on verified facts today, QTEX looks risky rather than clearly attractive or fairly valued. The production-floor milestone is a real positive for the story, but the stock’s sharp one-day jump, limited historical revenue, continuing losses and potential resale overhang make the risk-reward highly speculative. For the bull case to hold, QTREX needs to show that technical validation can become recurring commercial demand.