Key Takeaways:
- IonQ shares crashed 21% in a flash crash, now trading at $56.69
- Analysts flag a more compelling risk/reward entry at $50 or below
- The selloff threatens to spill over into quantum peers Quantinuum, D-Wave and Rigetti
Key Takeaways:

IonQ's 21% flash crash raises the question of whether quantum computing stocks have run too far, too fast — and the answer may hinge on whether the sector's bellwether can hold $50.
IonQ (NYSE: IONQ) shares plunged as much as 21% in a sudden selloff on June 10, closing at $56.69 and wiping out roughly $2 billion in market value. The flash crash, which triggered volatility halts, leaves the stock trading at a level that analysts describe as fully valued, with a more attractive entry point emerging only at $50 or below.
"At $56, IonQ is pricing in commercial quantum advantage that is still years away," Alex Nguyen, enterprise AI analyst at Edgen, said. "The risk/reward doesn't become compelling until the stock retests $50, which would bring its valuation closer to what the revenue base actually supports."
The selloff comes during a pivotal week for quantum computing. Quantinuum, the Honeywell-backed quantum firm, began trading on the Nasdaq on June 4 at $68 a share under the ticker QNT, raising $1.7 billion at a $15.6 billion valuation. Quantinuum reported 2025 revenue of $30.9 million, up 34% from a year earlier, but losses widened to $192.6 million as research and development spending surged. IonQ, which reported $43.1 million in revenue for 2025, now carries a market capitalization of roughly $12.5 billion — more than 200 times trailing sales.
IonQ's valuation has been buoyed by a broader quantum rally. Shares of D-Wave Quantum and Rigetti Computing have more than doubled over the past 12 months, while IBM's stock trades near a record high on federal support for quantum computing. The Commerce Department has awarded funding to both IBM and Quantinuum under the CHIPS and Science Act, signaling government backing for the sector. But the gap between revenue and market cap has widened to levels that some analysts say are unsustainable without a clear path to profitability.
The June 10 flash crash may reflect a broader rotation out of high-multiple tech names ahead of the SpaceX IPO, expected on June 12. The rocket and satellite internet company's listing is projected to be the largest of the year, potentially drawing speculative capital away from smaller quantum names. Six companies went public in the week ending June 4, collectively raising $34.2 billion — up 167% from the same period in 2025 — but IPO activity overall has slowed, with the number of new listings falling 17% year-over-year, according to Renaissance Capital.
For IonQ, the $50 level represents a critical technical and psychological floor. A break below that mark could trigger further selling from momentum-driven funds that piled into quantum names during the 12-month rally. Conversely, holding $50 would suggest the selloff was an overreaction, potentially setting up a rebound as the quantum sector awaits catalysts such as the Commerce Department's next funding tranche and Quantinuum's first earnings report as a public company.
IonQ shares, trading at more than 200 times trailing revenue, have little room for error. If the stock fails to hold $50, the quantum rally that lifted IonQ, D-Wave and Rigetti may face its first real test since the sector captured mainstream investor attention.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.