- Extreme rally and pullback: Rigetti Computing (NASDAQ: RGTI) stock has had a roller-coaster few months, soaring roughly 5,000% in 2025 (from under $1 to ~$56 on Oct. 15) [1] [2]. After hitting that all-time high (52-week range $0.36–$58.15), RGTI plunged about 25% in late October, sliding into the high-$30s. It closed at $39.60 on Oct. 23 (up +9.8% on the day) [3] and traded around $40.98 in pre-market on Oct. 24 [4]. Even after the retracement, the stock remains up thousands of percent year-over-year [5] [6].
- Recent catalysts: Investors credit several news items. In late Sept. Rigetti (with partner QphoX) won a $5.8M Air Force contract for quantum networking and booked roughly $5.7M in orders for two new “Novera” quantum computers (delivery in 2026) [7]. The company also launched a new 36-qubit, multi-chip processor on its cloud platform [8] [9]. Those achievements lent real-world credibility to the stock’s rise. More recently, a news report on Oct. 22 said the U.S. government is considering taking equity stakes in quantum firms (including Rigetti) in exchange for R&D funding [10]. That rumor sent RGTI +15.6% on Oct. 23 [11] (ahead of official denials), highlighting how policy buzz can swing the stock.
- Financials and outlook: Rigetti remains an early-stage company. Q2 2025 GAAP revenue was only $1.8 million (down ~42% YoY) [12] with a $39.7M net loss. Operating expenses are large (Q2 OpEx ~$20.4M [13]) as the company pours cash into R&D. Importantly, Rigetti finished Q2 with about $571.6M in cash (after a $350M equity raise) [14]. Analysts expect similarly modest sales in Q3 (~$2M) and continued losses; Rigetti will report its next quarterly results in November.
- Valuation and analyst views: At current prices, Rigetti’s valuation is astronomical – roughly 1,500× trailing sales by some measures [15] [16]. Market cap is on the order of $13–18 billion despite only single-digit millions in revenue. Wall Street is bullish long-term (TipRanks shows a unanimous “Strong Buy” consensus) [17], but forecasts are far below today’s price. For example, Benchmark’s highest 12‑month target is $50 (+8% upside) [18], and most analysts’ targets sit in the mid-$20s (roughly 40–50% below recent trading levels) [19] [20]. In other words, many brokers view the stock as overextended. One Seeking Alpha analyst even calls RGTI “massively overvalued” given its ~$17–18B market cap and lack of near-term profits [21].
- Quantum sector context: Rigetti is not alone in this frenzy. Peer quantum startups have also skyrocketed: trapped-ion specialist IonQ is up ~700% YTD and quantum-annealing pioneer D-Wave is up ~3,000–4,000% [22]. Big-tech firms are racing too. Just last week Google announced its new “Willow” quantum chip achieved a “first-ever verifiable quantum advantage,” running an algorithm 13,000× faster than a top classical supercomputer [23]. Microsoft and IBM have likewise stated that practical quantum machines are on the horizon [24]. Policymakers are also throwing weight behind quantum: on Oct. 23 media cited Commerce Dept. talks to back startups (continuing a trend of government equity in tech [25]). (Rigetti said it is “continuously engaging with the U.S. government on funding opportunities” [26].) All this has made quantum computing a headline theme, lifting sector ETFs and retail trading activity.
- Expert commentary and sentiment: The mood is electric but mixed with caution. Traders and commentators note the parabolic run-up looks eerily like a bubble. Barron’s recently warned quantum stocks “may keep inflating” until they are “tested by fundamentals” [27]. On the other hand, some strategists highlight the disruptive potential: IG Markets analyst Chris Beauchamp said the administration believes quantum “offers the chance to really revolutionize the U.S. economy” [28]. Rigetti’s CEO Kulkarni similarly stressed his team’s progress and confidence in its roadmap [29]. In the short term, many analysts expect volatility. As one tech newsletter put it, the stocks “may have bit off more than they can chew,” noting that former speculative booms eventually come down to earth [30].
In summary, Rigetti’s stock has been on a dizzying climb fueled by tangible tech wins and speculative fervor. Its recent pullback illustrates that even high-flying quantum names can wobble as “reality catches up to hype” [31]. The company’s next few quarters – and any future breakthroughs – will determine if this moonshot can sustainably advance or if it settles back toward earth.
Sources: Market data and analysis from Rigetti investor reports and financial sites [32] [33]; news of contracts and breakthroughs [34] [35]; technology and policy developments from Reuters and industry media [36] [37] [38]; expert quotes and forecasts from financial publications [39] [40] [41].
References
1. ts2.tech, 2. ts2.tech, 3. stockanalysis.com, 4. stockanalysis.com, 5. ts2.tech, 6. ts2.tech, 7. ts2.tech, 8. ts2.tech, 9. www.datacenterdynamics.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. ts2.tech, 12. www.nasdaq.com, 13. www.datacenterdynamics.com, 14. www.nasdaq.com, 15. ts2.tech, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. ts2.tech, 18. ts2.tech, 19. ts2.tech, 20. ts2.tech, 21. ts2.tech, 22. ts2.tech, 23. www.ndtv.com, 24. www.reuters.com, 25. www.reuters.com, 26. www.investopedia.com, 27. ts2.tech, 28. www.reuters.com, 29. www.datacenterdynamics.com, 30. ts2.tech, 31. ts2.tech, 32. stockanalysis.com, 33. www.nasdaq.com, 34. ts2.tech, 35. www.ndtv.com, 36. www.reuters.com, 37. ts2.tech, 38. www.reuters.com, 39. ts2.tech, 40. ts2.tech, 41. www.datacenterdynamics.com


