Quantum Breakthrough or Bubble? Rigetti Stock Rockets 5,000% in 2025
30 October 2025
8 mins read

Quantum Breakthrough or Bubble? Rigetti Stock Rockets 5,000% in 2025

  • Stock Surge: Rigetti Computing (NASDAQ: RGTI) shares exploded ~5,000% in 2025 – from penny-stock levels to ~$56 in mid-October [1] – before retreating to the high-$30s by late October [2] [3].
  • Big Contracts: In late Sept, Rigetti (with Dutch partner QphoX) won a $5.8M U.S. Air Force contract for superconducting quantum networking and received ~$5.7M in purchase orders for two on‑premises 9-qubit “Novera” quantum systems [4] [5].
  • New Quantum Processor: Rigetti launched its 36-qubit “Cepheus-1-36Q” multi-chip processor on its cloud platform, boasting 2× lower two-qubit error rates (99.5% fidelity) over its prior generation [6]. CEO Subodh Kulkarni says this leap “halved our error rates” and puts Rigetti on a “clear path towards quantum advantage” (a 100+ qubit system is planned by year-end) [7].
  • Financial Snapshot: Q2 2025 revenue was only $1.8M (with a net loss of $39.7M) [8], yet Rigetti raised $350M in Q2 equity funding and held ~$572M cash (no debt) at quarter-end [9]. At this pace, the company’s annual sales would be under $10M, a fraction of its market capitalization (recently in the low-$10s billion), implying an extraordinary ~1,500× sales multiple [10].
  • Analyst View: Wall Street’s consensus is “Moderate Buy,” but analysts’ average 12‑month price target (~$28) is about 30% below current levels [11]. Many note that at ~$12–17B market cap vs. tiny revenue, RGTI is “massively overvalued” given “questionable fundamentals” [12]. Even bullish analysts caution the parabolic run “may be unsustainable,” calling for a reality check as earnings catch up to hype [13].
  • Quantum Mania & Policy Buzz: Rigetti rode a broader quantum stock boom (IonQ +700% YTD, D-Wave +2,000%+) [14]. The rally was stoked by reports the U.S. government might take equity stakes in quantum firms. A Wall Street Journal scoop on Oct. 23 sent RGTI up ~8% on the day [15] (though Commerce Dept. later denied active negotiations [16]).

Rigetti’s wild ride has analysts and investors polarized. Shares soared on promises and partnerships, but questions loom about fundamentals and sustainability.

Record Surge and Sudden Pullback

Rigetti’s stock went from “penny stock” to stratospheric heights in 2025. As TS2.tech reports, RGTI traded for mere cents early in 2025 and rocketed to a closing high of $56.34 on October 15 – an almost 50-fold increase [17] [18]. In fact, a one-day 25% spike on October 13 kicked the price from the mid-$40s into the mid-$50s range [19]. This frenzied rally briefly gave Rigetti a market value in the mid‑$10’s of billions despite its tiny revenue base.

However, euphoria turned to whiplash by mid-October. By Oct. 16 the stock plunged nearly 15% intraday (falling back into the $40s) and continued sliding – closing around $43.30 on Oct. 20 (a ~25% retreat from the peak) [20]. Notably, there was no bad news from Rigetti itself – the sell-off was driven by broader market jitters (e.g. a banking-sector scare) and profit-taking after a parabolic run [21]. As Reuters noted, quantum names “climbed to record highs last week before sliding into a string of daily declines,” underscoring the volatility [22] [23]. By the week of Oct. 27, RGTI was trading around $38–$40 [24] [25] (compared to a 52-week range from under $1 to nearly $60).

Critically, this swoon wasn’t triggered by company news. In fact, observers say profit-taking was inevitable after such a rally. One analyst noted that after an “unbelievable rally,” even a “quantum leap” in stock price will eventually “be yanked back to earth once momentum cools” [26]. In short, RGTI’s wild swings highlight both the thrill and the peril of speculative tech runs [27].

Real-World Deals and Tech Milestones Fuel Hype

Behind the buzz are concrete achievements. Rigetti has amassed a string of partnerships and orders that suggest its technology is moving from lab to application. In late September the company announced it had been awarded a three-year, $5.8 million contract by the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory for “superconducting quantum networking,” to be developed with partner QphoX [28]. Virtually simultaneously, Rigetti said it secured about $5.7 million in purchase orders for two of its Novera quantum computing systems – 9‑qubit on-premises machines [29] [30]. One goes to an unnamed Asian tech manufacturer for internal R&D; the other to a U.S. AI startup for quantum hardware and error-correction research [31]. These Novera systems (introduced in 2023) are sold as complete hardware R&D platforms. CEO Kulkarni remarked that the Novera “continues to be chosen and trusted by national labs and researchers” and that he is “excited to see the increased demand for on-premises quantum computing systems as the industry matures” [32].

On the product side, Rigetti in August made its 36-qubit Cepheus-1-36Q processor generally available on the cloud [33]. This four-chip quantum computer (each chip is 9 qubits) achieved a median two-qubit gate fidelity of 99.5% – roughly twice the performance of its prior system [34] [35]. In practical terms, Kulkarni says this means error rates are half what they were before, paving the way to much larger machines. (“We’ve once again halved our error rates,” he explained, noting the chiplet-based design scales towards their goal of 100+ qubits [36].) The Cepheus-1 rollout was touted as the “industry’s largest multi-chip quantum computer” to date, and is expected to soon appear on partners’ platforms (Rigetti said Azure support is coming) [37] [38].

Rigetti has also extended its ecosystem via collaborations. In October it announced support for NVIDIA’s new NVQLink platform, which links NVIDIA AI supercomputers to quantum machines [39]. (Rigetti showcased an NVQLink demo at NVIDIA’s GTC conference and CEO Kulkarni said the integration will help “accelerate hybrid computation development” as the industry pushes toward “quantum advantage” [40].) On the academic front, Rigetti partnered with Montana State University in August to deploy a Novera system at MSU’s new QCORE quantum research center [41] – making MSU the first university with an on-prem Rigetti computer.

These advances and contracts have fundamentally shifted the narrative. Investors now see Rigetti as a hardware vendor, not just a cloud quantum service, which underpins the stock’s reassessment. As TS2.tech explains, each of these “real-world wins” has “ignited investor enthusiasm” by showing tangible progress [42]. However, even as deals accumulate, experts note they are still small dollars in quantum terms: the AFRL and Novera orders total only ~$11M, and Novera sales expand the base of research users rather than immediately generating big revenue.

Financials: Small Revenue, Big Cash Burn

Rigetti’s books remain unprofitable. In Q2 2025 (quarter ended June 30) it reported just $1.8 million in revenue against $20.4 million in operating expenses, resulting in a net loss of $39.7 million [43]. (That included $22.8M of non‑cash accounting charges on stock-linked liabilities.) These revenues were flat compared to the prior quarter but down sharply year-over-year, reflecting a contraction in R&D contracts and no significant new sales yet. Notably, output from the U.S. National Quantum Initiative (a source of prior contracts) has apparently lapsed pending new funding, which partly explains the year-on-year drop [44]. Q2 gross margin fell to ~31% (versus 64% a year ago) due mainly to contract mix [45].

However, Rigetti’s balance sheet is strong for a development-stage tech company. It raised about $350 million in Q2 via stock sales and had $571.6 million in cash and equivalents on June 30 [46], with virtually no debt. That war chest gives it runway to invest in its roadmap. Management said the cash is intended for “working capital, capital expenditures and other general corporate purposes,” including potential partnerships or acquisitions [47].

Analysts will be watching the Nov 10 Q3 2025 report (after markets close) for signs of growth. Early consensus calls (via Zacks/Nasdaq) are modest: Q3 revenue is expected around $2.39M (essentially flat year-over-year) with an EPS loss of $0.05 [48]. Until larger contracts or sales arrive, quarterly revenue is likely to stay in the low single-digit millions. In any case, this makes RGTI’s valuation eye-popping: TS2 notes the stock now trades at roughly 1,500× estimated sales [49], far beyond normal tech multiples.

Analyst Outlook & Valuation Concerns

Wall Street’s take is mixed. According to MarketBeat, 6 analysts cover RGTI: five have “Buy” ratings and one is a “Sell” [50]. The average 12-month price target is only ~$28 [51], roughly 40% below the recent trading range. (Cantor Fitzgerald’s late July $15 target and Industrial Alliance’s $18 target have already been overshadowed by the rally, while Williams Trading upgraded to $50 right before October.) Overall, the consensus is “Moderate Buy” [52], reflecting cautious optimism about Rigetti’s technology.

Many analysts also sound the alarm on valuation. As TS2.tech observes, a decade of hype has ballooned Rigetti’s market cap to an estimated $15–18 billion [53]. That is staggering given its tiny revenue: even including 2024, total sales were in the single-digit millions. One analyst bluntly called RGTI “‘massively overvalued’ given its ~$17B market cap, despite questionable fundamentals and no near-term path to profitability” [54].

Rigetti insiders have themselves trimmed stakes during this rally. TS2 and regulatory filings note that CEO Kulkarni sold 1,000,000 shares earlier in 2025 [55]. Recent SEC filings (via MarketBeat) show a director selling 62,000 shares on Oct. 17 at ~$44 (and another director sold 100k at $19 in Sept) [56]. This insider activity has raised eyebrows, though it occurred well before the stock’s record highs. It underscores that some at the company may be “tamping down expectations” amid irrational exuberance.

Bottom line: analysts acknowledge Rigetti’s promise in quantum computing, but almost all warn that the current price may run ahead of reality. As one TS2 report puts it, experts “like Rigetti’s potential but question whether its current sky-high stock price can be justified without significant earnings or breakthroughs” [57].

Quantum Sector Context and Government Push

Rigetti isn’t alone in this frenzy. In fact, TS2 dubs the “Quantum Four” (Rigetti, IonQ, D-Wave and Quantum Computing Inc.) as the epicenter of a speculative quantum boom [58]. For context, industry leader IonQ has gained ~700% YTD [59], and D-Wave over 2,000% [60]. Even traditional financial giants are entering the space: JPMorgan announced plans to invest in quantum computing as part of a $1.5 trillion strategic initiative [61].

A recent Washington policy storyline added fuel. On Oct. 23, news broke that the White House was reportedly exploring federal equity stakes in critical tech firms (including quantum companies) to secure supply chains. That WSJ scoop sent Rigetti stock up ~8% on Oct 23 [62]. (American investors hoped the government would fund quantum R&D via partial ownership.) Almost immediately, the Commerce Dept. issued a statement clarifying it was not currently negotiating equity deals [63]. Nevertheless, the mere hint of federal backing rejuvenated some of the rally, illustrating how strategic interest in quantum can move markets. As IG Markets analyst Chris Beauchamp told Reuters, quantum computing “offers the chance to really revolutionize the U.S. economy” [64] – highlighting why policymakers are paying attention.

Outlook: Breakthrough or Bubble?

Rigetti’s near-term outlook hinges on execution of its roadmap and conversion of hype into revenue. The big questions are: Will the upcoming hardware deals turn into steady revenue streams? Can the new processors enable attractive applications? And will the U.S. government or large tech partners commit serious funding to accelerate growth?

For now, investors must decide if Rigetti’s stock price reflects a quantum breakthrough or an unsustainable bubble. The facts: Rigetti has compelling tech and a pile of cash, with major partners (USAIR Force, NVIDIA, etc.) validating its approach. But it has no profits yet, negligible sales, and a market cap that assumes future success.

As Rigetti itself cautioned, expectations must be “tamped down” despite the media hype. The coming weeks are crucial: Rigetti reports Q3 results on Nov. 10 (after close) with a conference call on Nov. 11 [65]. Investors will be watching whether the company can show concrete revenue growth and continued technical progress. Until then, the company remains a high-volatility, high-reward bet in the emerging quantum computing race. Whether its stock is destined to soar even higher or to give back gains will likely hinge on the next steps in both its technology journey and the wider quantum market evolution.

Sources: Financial news releases and analysis from Rigetti, Reuters, MarketBeat, TS2.tech, Nasdaq, and DatacenterDynamics [66] [67] [68] [69] [70] (see in-text citations).

Rigetti Stock: $40 Quantum Stock With New Targets...

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A technology and finance expert writing for TS2.tech. He analyzes developments in satellites, telecommunications, and artificial intelligence, with a focus on their impact on global markets. Author of industry reports and market commentary, often cited in tech and business media. Passionate about innovation and the digital economy.

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