RJ Hamster
Starlink pre-IPO opportunity with this $30 stock
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This Week’s Exclusive News
What to Make of D-Wave’s Latest Defense Industry Push
Reported by Nathan Reiff. Posted: 2/10/2026.
In Brief
- D-Wave Quantum’s partnership with defense industry firms Davidson Technologies and Anduril Industries has already yielded a 9% to 12% improvement to threat mitigation for air and missile planning scenarios.
- The partnership expands on an existing collaboration between D-Wave and Davidson, announced last year, in which D-Wave installed an Advantage2 quantum system at Davidson’s Alabama headquarters.
- The big question for investors is likely to be how this may translate into sales agreements for D-Wave, but answers remain unclear.
The year is off to an eventful start for quantum computing leader D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS). The company has announced major new contracts, acquired rival Quantum Circuits, and triggered investor concern with shelf registrations totaling about $330 million. Those mixed signals have weighed on sentiment—QBTS shares are down nearly 20% year-to-date (YTD).
Amid moves to position itself as a dual-focused quantum-annealing and gate-model company, D-Wave is quietly expanding into the defense sector through an expanded partnership targeting U.S. air- and missile-defense planning. But can this effort translate into meaningful revenue for D-Wave, or is it another promising development that may not immediately produce sales or profits?
Inside D-Wave’s Latest Collaboration With Davidson and Anduril
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The late-January announcement details a collaboration with defense and aerospace consultant Davidson Technologies and autonomous-systems defense firm Anduril Industries.
The partners aim to develop hybrid quantum-classical computing applications for U.S. air- and missile-defense planning scenarios.
The results reported so far are encouraging—D-Wave said a hybrid quantum-classical approach produced a tenfold reduction in time-to-solution and a 9%–12% improvement in threat mitigation. In a 500-missile attack simulation, the partnership intercepted an additional 45–60 missiles compared with earlier efforts.
D-Wave had already worked with Davidson earlier in 2026, installing an Advantage2 quantum-annealing system at Davidson’s Alabama headquarters. That collaboration was intended to advance quantum research with defense applications and explore opportunities to serve the U.S. Department of Defense.
Is Another Practical Application of D-Wave’s Tech Emerging?
This expansion builds on the prior Davidson work and edges toward a concrete use case for the Advantage2 system. Advantage2 has attracted less attention recently as D-Wave has also emphasized traditional gate-model quantum technologies. The earlier Davidson collaboration was promising but relatively open-ended and didn’t make clear how it would convert research into near-term sales.
The 2026 announcement, by contrast, includes tangible performance metrics that could make the technology more marketable to government and military customers. As more evidence surfaces that hybrid quantum-classical approaches can outperform classical-only solutions, D-Wave may have a stronger case for strategic defense use.
That said, the company has not announced any major U.S. military contracts yet and would face stiff competition in the defense market. D-Wave does not appear to be repositioning itself as a defense contractor; rather, it is demonstrating that quantum technology could be transformative across multiple industries. Investors may view this breadth as potential for significant upside, or they may worry D-Wave is spreading itself too thin—even with its substantial cash reserves.
Has D-Wave’s Partnership With Davidson Moved the Needle For Analysts?
It’s unclear how much the expanded partnership influenced Wall Street sentiment. By the end of January, Rosenblatt Securities, Needham & Co., and Canaccord Genuity had all either reiterated Buy ratings or set fairly ambitious price targets for QBTS shares.
The stock carries a broadly favorable analyst consensus, with a price target above $38 per share—about 80% higher than where the stock was trading in mid-February.
However, that analyst optimism may reflect a combination of factors. D-Wave issued several positive updates around the same time, including a major quantum-computing-as-a-service (QCaaS) agreement with a Fortune 100 company and the sale of an Advantage2 system to Florida Atlantic University, any of which could have influenced ratings and targets.
What is clear is that the company continues to press aggressively to expand its reach in 2026.
Investors will need to judge for themselves whether D-Wave’s multi-pronged strategy is likely to deliver commercial success.
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