WEEKLY · RAW MARKDOWN
2026-W22
# Quantum Intelligence Weekly — 2026-W22 (week ending 2026-05-31) *The sixth weekly roll-up published by this system covers the ISO week 2026-05-25 through 2026-05-31 (Sunday). Six structured events, all at score ≥6: two score 8, two score 7, two score 6. After W21's $2B CHIPS Act sovereign-capital window, W22 is the public-market counterpart. On Tuesday 2026-05-26 two large pure-play quantum public-listing events moved in a single trading session — Quantinuum filed Amendment No. 2 to its S-1 setting IPO pricing at $45–50/share for a $12.7B fully-diluted valuation (Nasdaq: QNT, score 8), and Terra Quantum signed a definitive de-SPAC business combination with Axiom Intelligence at a $3.5B pro-forma equity valuation (Nasdaq: TQ, score 8). The W21 CHIPS umbrella continued resolving into company-level structure: D-Wave disclosed its $100M slot as a common-stock issuance directly to the U.S. Department of Commerce, making the federal government a prospective direct minority shareholder (score 7), and IBM filed an 8-K Item 7.01 crystallizing a >$10B five-year quantum capital commitment (score 7). Two score-6 PQC/standards items close the week: GlobalPlatform's Pavona open-silicon distribution with hardware-accelerated ML-KEM/ML-DSA (2026-05-26), and ETH Zurich's Nature paper on device-independent randomness amplification over a 30-meter superconducting cryogenic link (2026-05-27). W22 is not a fourth-Monday calibration window; the next calibration note is due at W25.* --- ## The week in one paragraph W22 turns the page from sovereign supply to public-market demand. On Tuesday 2026-05-26, two large pure-play quantum listings moved within one trading session. Quantinuum filed Amendment No. 2 to its Form S-1 (CIK 0002110105, accession 0001628280-26-037917), setting concrete IPO pricing terms: 21,052,632 Class A shares at $45.00–$50.00, raising up to approximately $1.05 billion in gross proceeds at a $12.7 billion fully-diluted valuation, listing on the Nasdaq Global Market under ticker QNT (score 8). The same day, Switzerland-based Terra Quantum AG signed a definitive business combination agreement with Nasdaq-listed Axiom Intelligence Acquisition Corp 1 at a $3.5 billion pro-forma equity valuation, targeting a Nasdaq listing under ticker TQ in the second half of 2026 (score 8). The W21 CHIPS Act umbrella continued to resolve into company-level structure: D-Wave Quantum disclosed that its $100 million CHIPS slot is structured as a $100 million common-stock issuance directly to the U.S. Department of Commerce — making the federal government a prospective direct minority shareholder of a publicly-listed quantum company, a structure not previously seen at a tracked U.S. pure-play (score 7) — and IBM filed an 8-K Item 7.01 Regulation FD disclosure crystallizing a commitment of more than $10 billion over five years to quantum across R&D, capex, ecosystem, manufacturing, and M&A, reaffirming the 2029 large-scale fault-tolerant target and tied to its Anderon foundry leg (score 7). Two technical/standards items round out the week at score 6: GlobalPlatform launched Pavona, the first multi-vendor open-silicon PQC distribution with hardware-accelerated ML-KEM (FIPS 203) and ML-DSA (FIPS 204) and a twelve-member founding coalition (Meta, Qualcomm, Tenstorrent, ZeroRISC, Max Planck Institute for Security and Privacy among them); and ETH Zurich published in Nature a Bell-test-certified device-independent randomness-amplification experiment over its 30-meter superconducting cryogenic link. The week issued no corrections and promoted no insider patterns. ## The six developments that mattered most ### 1. Quantinuum files S-1/A No. 2 setting IPO pricing at $45–50/share, ~$1.05B gross, $12.7B valuation, Nasdaq: QNT (2026-05-26, score 8) Quantinuum filed Amendment No. 2 to its Form S-1 with the SEC (CIK 0002110105, accession 0001628280-26-037917), establishing the pricing terms for what would be the largest pure-play quantum IPO ever filed. The offering is 21,052,632 shares of Class A common stock at a proposed range of $45.00–$50.00; at the top of the range, the offering raises approximately $1.05 billion in gross proceeds and values the company at approximately $12.7 billion on a fully-diluted basis. The underwriters hold an over-allotment option of up to 3,157,894 additional shares. J.P. Morgan and Morgan Stanley are joint lead active book-running managers. The $12.7 billion top-of-range valuation is a roughly 27% premium to the $10 billion pre-money at which Quantinuum raised $600 million in September 2025, and a roughly 37% discount to the >$20 billion target referenced in trade-press coverage after the original 2026-05-08 S-1. The S-1/A carries forward FY2025 financials (revenue $30.9M against a $192.6M net loss). Per §8.2 row 8, this is a concrete capital advance with near-term consequence; held at 8 rather than 9 because the offering had not closed in-window — the score-9 closed-financing anchor applies when QNT begins trading. Pricing is expected on or about 2026-06-03/04, with the first trade targeted 2026-06-04; that event, if it prices as scheduled, will land in W23. ### 2. Terra Quantum signs definitive de-SPAC with Axiom Intelligence at $3.5B pro-forma equity valuation, Nasdaq: TQ (2026-05-26, score 8) The same trading day, Switzerland-based Terra Quantum AG and Nasdaq-listed Axiom Intelligence Acquisition Corp 1 (NASDAQ: AXIN) announced execution of a definitive business combination agreement valuing the combined entity at a $3.5 billion pro-forma equity valuation (enterprise value approximately $3.6 billion assuming no public-shareholder redemptions), with the combined company to trade on the Nasdaq Global Market under ticker TQ upon closing. Assuming no redemptions, the transaction delivers approximately $190 million in trust proceeds; the parties additionally contemplate a supplemental PIPE. Pro-forma ownership splits approximately 92% to existing Terra Quantum shareholders and approximately 8% to Axiom Intelligence stakeholders pre-redemption. CEO Markus Pflitsch, CFO Eike Marx, and CTO Florian Neukart continue in their roles. The disclosure is anchored on SEC filings (Axiom 8-K Item 7.01 accession 0001213900-26-061057 and Form 425 accession 0001213900-26-061060, CIK 0002057030, both 2026-05-26). At $3.5 billion this is the third-largest tracked quantum public-market valuation event (behind Quantinuum's $12.7 billion the same day and IonQ's 2021 de-SPAC). Terra Quantum is a hybrid quantum-classical algorithm and quantum-security software company (SPECTRE and SecureSign product lines), placing its strategic comparables closer to Classiq, Multiverse, and SandboxAQ than to the trapped-ion / superconducting hardware names. Per §8.2 row 8, this is a concrete capital advance; held at 8 rather than 9 because the merger had not closed and SPAC redemption rates historically erode trust proceeds at the close stage. ### 3. IBM 8-K Item 7.01 crystallizes >$10B five-year quantum capital commitment, reaffirming the 2029 fault-tolerant target (2026-05-28, score 7) IBM (NYSE: IBM, CIK 0000051143) filed an 8-K Item 7.01 Regulation FD Disclosure (accession 0000051143-26-000047, filed 2026-05-28) communicating that "over the next 5 years IBM plans to invest more than $10B to advance our leadership position in quantum, including in R&D, capex, ecosystem partnerships, manufacturing scaling, and M&A," with the commitment explicitly underwriting the 2029 large-scale fault-tolerant target. The filing notes IBM has deployed more than 90 quantum systems to date and built a global ecosystem of 325+ Fortune 500 companies, startups, universities, and government agencies, and ties the commitment to the 2026-05-21 Anderon foundry Letter of Intent ($1B CHIPS + $1B IBM match, separately scored 8 in W21). IBM common stock closed up approximately 5.3% on the day. This is the largest single-company quantum capex commitment publicly disclosed to date. Per §8.2, held at 7 rather than 8 because the $10B is a forward-looking capital-allocation commitment rather than an executed technical milestone, the Anderon foundry leg is not double-counted, and the Starling 2029 roadmap (200 logical qubits, 100 million quantum gates) was previously disclosed; what is genuinely novel is the explicit $10B/5y capital commitment under Reg-FD framing. Held above 6 because the 8-K Item 7.01 crystallizes the commitment under federal-securities-law liability and the market response was material and broad-based across the quantum-public-equity complex. ### 4. D-Wave's $100M CHIPS slot disclosed as a common-stock issuance to Commerce — federal government as direct minority shareholder (2026-05-26, score 7) D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS) issued a corporate press release confirming the signing of its $100 million Letter of Intent under the CHIPS and Science Act, the company-level disclosure of its slot in the W21 $2.013 billion nine-company umbrella package. The disclosure adds two structural details beyond the umbrella announcement: the funding mechanism is a $100 million issuance of D-Wave common stock to the U.S. Department of Commerce, to occur "in connection with executing final award documents"; and the equity issuance is to the federal government directly, not to an affiliated investment vehicle, making the U.S. Government a prospective direct minority shareholder of D-Wave upon close. At recent trading prices, $100 million represents roughly 3.3–4.0 million shares, or approximately 1.5–2.0% of the outstanding base — a non-controlling minority stake consistent with the umbrella event's framing. CEO Alan Baratz characterized the LOI as a "significant endorsement by the U.S. government of D-Wave's annealing and gate-model quantum computing technologies." D-Wave did not file an Item 1.01 8-K for the LOI (consistent with non-binding LOI status; the two same-day 8-Ks relate to the SQFab grant and the company's response to the Flatiron classical-simulation work). Per §8.2 row 7, this is an unexpected corporate action at a tracked public company; held at 7 rather than 8 because the $100 million tranche is materially smaller than the IBM $1B and GlobalFoundries $375M tranches, and held above 6 because direct U.S.-Government equity ownership of a tracked quantum-hardware company is a structural precedent that may extend to the other six recipients (Rigetti, Infleqtion, Atom Computing, PsiQuantum, Quantinuum, Diraq) as their own company-level disclosures land. ### 5. GlobalPlatform launches Pavona, the first multi-vendor open-silicon PQC distribution with hardware-accelerated ML-KEM and ML-DSA (2026-05-26, score 6) Standards body GlobalPlatform launched Pavona, an open-source silicon distribution providing modular, certification-ready IP blocks with integrated hardware accelerators for the ML-KEM (FIPS 203) and ML-DSA (FIPS 204) post-quantum-cryptography primitives finalized by NIST in 2024. Pavona is governed as a community-run hardware-security foundation (Governing Board plus independent Technical Steering Committee) and is supported by twelve founding members including ZeroRISC, Meta, Qualcomm, Tenstorrent, and the Max Planck Institute for Security and Privacy. It ships two reference configurations — a standalone discrete root-of-trust chip and a chiplet-integrated root-of-trust module — targeting cloud data centers, industrial IoT, and automotive control networks. GlobalPlatform reports 6- to 9-fold throughput gains and 36% to 75% maximum-operational-frequency improvement over software-only ML-KEM/ML-DSA implementations on comparable substrates. Per §8.2 row 6 and the "Trap 7 — under-rating standards" caution, PQC standards activity is load-bearing for the CISO audience. Held at 6 rather than 7 because the FIPS 140-3 and Common Criteria characterizations are stated alignment intent, not completed certifications, and no production-deployment timeline at the founding-member companies was disclosed; held above 5 because the open-silicon distribution model is structurally novel and the founding-member coverage spans the production silicon supply chain for consumer cryptography hardware. Source confidence is medium (trade-press-anchored). ### 6. ETH Zurich publishes Nature paper on device-independent randomness amplification over a 30-meter superconducting cryogenic link (2026-05-27, score 6) Researchers at ETH Zurich's Department of Physics — led by Andreas Wallraff (Quantum Device Lab) and Renato Renner (theory) — published "Experimental Randomness Amplification" in Nature (DOI 10.1038/s41586-026-10521-8). Using the team's 30-meter cryogenic-link superconducting-qubit platform — the same platform behind the 2023 loophole-free Bell-inequality violation (S = 2.0747 ± 0.0033, P < 10⁻¹⁰⁸) — the experiment performs a Bell-test-certified randomness-amplification protocol that converts imperfect random inputs into output bits whose randomness is mathematically certified by the observed Bell violation, independent of the trustworthiness of the underlying hardware. The institutional press release characterizes the result as a milestone with applications across secure-key generation, blockchain consensus, and cryptographic infrastructure requiring certified randomness. Per §8.2 row 6, held at 6 rather than 7 because the protocol is a research demonstration rather than a deployable product, the press release omits named-metric throughput (random bits per second) and certification-confidence numbers, and no commercial deployment partner is named; held above 5 because peer-reviewed Nature publication is the highest-tier verification venue, Wallraff and Renner are first-tier principal investigators, and certified randomness is the upstream primitive on which all post-quantum key-encapsulation and signature schemes depend — giving the result direct CISO-audience relevance. ## Capital flow W22's capital is entirely public-market and sovereign/corporate; zero traditional private VC rounds closed at tracked entities, and there were zero listed-quantum earnings prints (the Q1 2026 cohort closed in W20; the Q2 2026 cohort is scheduled August 2026). Public-market events: - **Quantinuum IPO pricing (S-1/A No. 2)** — 21,052,632 shares at $45–50; up to ~$1.05B gross at a $12.7B fully-diluted valuation; Nasdaq: QNT. Not priced in-window (pricing expected ~2026-06-03/04, first trade targeted 2026-06-04). (2026-05-26) - **Terra Quantum de-SPAC** — definitive business combination with Axiom Intelligence at $3.5B pro-forma equity / ~$3.6B EV; ~$190M trust proceeds at zero redemptions, contemplated PIPE; Nasdaq: TQ, close expected 2H 2026. (2026-05-26) Sovereign / corporate capital: - **D-Wave Quantum CHIPS slot** — $100M to issue as D-Wave common stock directly to the U.S. Department of Commerce upon final award documents (US Government as prospective direct minority shareholder). (2026-05-26) - **IBM quantum commitment** — >$10B over five years (8-K Item 7.01), tied to the Anderon $1B CHIPS + $1B IBM-match foundry leg. (2026-05-28) Once both public listings close, the prospective aggregate quantum public-equity float rises by an estimated $4.55B ($3.5B Terra Quantum + ~$1.05B Quantinuum top-of-range incremental). The week records zero EODHD insider-stream appends above the standing cursor 2026-04-28 for the twelfth consecutive run. ## Technical progress W22's technical arc is dominated by the PQC / standards strand rather than by hardware-fidelity records. GlobalPlatform's Pavona is the first multi-vendor open-silicon distribution shipping reference hardware for the post-FIPS-203/204 lattice primitives, with a founding-member roster spanning the production silicon supply chain (Meta, Qualcomm, Tenstorrent, ZeroRISC, MPI-SP) — structurally novel, though its certifications are alignment-intent only. ETH Zurich's device-independent randomness amplification is foundational rather than commercial: certified randomness is the upstream primitive on which post-quantum key-encapsulation and signature schemes depend, giving a research-grade Nature result direct CISO relevance. Its productization path runs through QRNG vendors (ID Quantique, QuintessenceLabs, Quside) and HSM vendors (Thales, Entrust, Utimaco). IBM's >$10B commitment is a capital-allocation milestone — the capex spine of the Starling 2029 roadmap — rather than a new technical benchmark. ## Talent movement No score-≥6 talent events in-window. Sub-threshold talent signals surfaced in trade-press coverage: a Who's-News roundup of strategic leadership appointments across Quandela, Zapata Quantum, Imperagen, and EigenQ (2026-05-30, score 4), and the Zapata Quantum restructuring/restart with co-founders Yudong Cao returning as CTO and Jonathan Olson as VP Strategy & Operations (score 5). Both are tracked for the calibration window but neither reached the daily/weekly featured threshold. ## Policy and government The CHIPS Act umbrella is resolving into a direct-federal-equity ownership model. D-Wave's $100M common-stock-to-Commerce disclosure is the first explicit company-level confirmation of the "minority non-controlling equity stakes" framing from the W21 umbrella event, making the U.S. Government a prospective direct shareholder rather than an arms-length grantor. The structural consequences to watch: CFIUS-equivalent inbound-investment review overhead on subsequent recipient equity issuances or M&A, and governance/voting/disclosure obligations across each recipient's roadmap horizon. The other six recipients' company-level disclosures (Rigetti, Infleqtion, Atom Computing, PsiQuantum, Quantinuum, Diraq) remain pending. No NIST/FIPS draft-to-final standards transitions occurred in-window. ## PQC and security Two W22 events sit in the post-quantum-cryptography track. GlobalPlatform's Pavona hardware-accelerates the NIST-standardized ML-KEM (FIPS 203) and ML-DSA (FIPS 204) lattice primitives across a twelve-member production-silicon coalition, giving the migration-baseline asymmetric PQC primitives a multi-vendor open hardware reference. ETH Zurich's certified-randomness amplification is upstream-adjacent: certified randomness is the foundation that PQC key-encapsulation and signature schemes depend on for security. The combined signal is that the PQC-era hardware substrate — both the primitive accelerators and the entropy source — is moving from software and proprietary IP toward open, multi-vendor, and certified models. ## Insider signals No insider patterns were promoted in-window, and the `open_insider_patterns` set remained empty throughout. The EODHD insider-transactions incremental fetch above the standing cursor 2026-04-28 returned zero rows across all 22 tracked US tickers for the twelfth consecutive run; the cursor is unchanged. Pattern detection currently operates on Patterns A and B only, with C reduced to C1 (pending a 12-month per-insider baseline) and C2/E inert per the documented EODHD limitations (only P/S transaction codes exposed; `postTransactionAmount` and `plan_type` null). ## What's quiet - Zero corrections issued in-window (2026-05-25 through 2026-05-31); the corrections trail is clean for W22. - Zero traditional private VC rounds closed at tracked entities; zero listed-quantum earnings prints. - Zero EODHD insider-stream appends above cursor 2026-04-28 (twelfth consecutive run); no promoted insider patterns. - No NIST/FIPS standards transitions and no new arXiv quant-ph item clearing score 6 in-window beyond the ETH Zurich Nature publication. - Quantinuum had not priced as of the W22 close (pricing expected ~2026-06-03/04; first trade targeted 2026-06-04) — the closed-financing event will land in W23 if it prices as scheduled. - The EDGAR EFTS full-text-search endpoint returned HTTP 403 in the run environment this week; corporate-action coverage relied on the EODHD topic feed plus Tier-1 trade-press corroboration (the documented fallback). No new material 8-K surfaced via that fallback for the trailing window. ## Earlier this month (sub-threshold, surfaced in weekly per the W17 precedent) A cluster of score-≤5 items dated within or adjacent to the window surface here rather than in daily newsletters: Massachusetts committed $25M to anchor MIT's Quantum Systems Laboratory (2026-05-29, score 5); Infleqtion (INFQ) established a UK Quantum Innovation Centre and manufacturing hub in Oxford (2026-05-29, score 5); Quantum Machines reported 99.5% two-qubit gate fidelity operating Rigetti's Novera QPU (2026-05-29, score 5); Rigetti simulated plasma-wave dispersion on its Ankaa-3 processor with LLNL and CU Boulder (2026-05-29, score 5); Lastwall raised a $16M Series A extension for identity-first quantum-resilient cybersecurity (score 5); Zapata Quantum restructured/restarted (score 5); Quantum Source and the Weizmann Institute reported a single-atom-on-photonic-chip benchmark in arXiv:2605.09532 (score 5); Imperagen raised a £5M seed for a quantum-biocatalysis platform (score 4); and Oracle and Classiq demonstrated a 36-qubit Markowitz portfolio-optimization workflow simulated on OCI NVIDIA DGX A100 hardware (classical simulation, score 4). None reached the score-6 daily-newsletter threshold. ## Methodology and calibration W22 is not a fourth-Monday calibration window; the prior calibration ran at W21 (W18+W19+W20+W21 scope) and the next is due at W25 (W22+W23+W24+W25 scope). Per hard rule 13, `feedback.jsonl` was read for awareness only this run, with no in-run scoring adjustment and no proposed edits to `scoring-rubric.md` or `noise-filter.md`. Six events aggregated by event.date within 2026-05-25..2026-05-31; the France (2026-05-22), Flatiron (2026-05-21), and Xanadu (2026-05-21) events that share a 2026-05-25 source_daily with this window were aggregated into W21 by event.date and are not double-counted here. The daily run for 2026-06-01 (UTC) was operationally quiet (zero events, quiet wrapper). Four EODHD topic-feed items failed the §7.5 supplementary-source filter and were logged to `/rejections/2026-06.jsonl` as `eodhd_news_unconfirmed`. --- *Generated 2026-06-01 (UTC). Sources are cited per event in the structured weekly wrapper at `/weekly/2026-W22.json`. All figures paraphrased from primary filings and named trade-press corroboration; no press-release text reproduced verbatim.*