The U.S. government is intensifying its focus on quantum computing by allocating over $2 billion in CHIPS incentives for companies engaged in developing the hardware that has the potential to disrupt existing cryptographic systems. The Department of Commerce has announced letters of intent with nine key players in the quantum sector, which include prominent firms such as IBM, GlobalFoundries, D-Wave, Rigetti, Infleqtion, PsiQuantum, Quantinuum, Atom Computing, and Diraq. In this initiative, the government will acquire minority, non-controlling equity interests in these companies, signifying a more hands-on industrial policy approach similar to strategies already seen in the semiconductor and strategic supply chain sectors.
IBM is set to receive a significant $1 billion to create a new subsidiary focused specifically on quantum-grade superconducting wafers. Meanwhile, GlobalFoundries is expected to garner $375 million to enhance domestic manufacturing capabilities across various quantum architectures. Additional funding targets specific challenges across different quantum technologies, including neutral-atom, photonic, trapped-ion, silicon-spin, and superconducting systems.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick highlighted that these investments will bolster “American quantum capabilities,” presenting the funding as both a pathway to manufacturing advancements and a strategic move for national security.
The announcement coincides with a growing discourse surrounding Q-Day—a term used to describe a future juncture when robust quantum computing could potentially undermine the cryptographic protections used in systems like Bitcoin and Ethereum, as well as within banks and other secure communications. The key risk is not the immediate failure of Bitcoin, but rather the possibility that public blockchains may lack adequate time to implement necessary upgrades before quantum systems become widely operational.
This concern has transitioned from theoretical discussions to practical market considerations. Industry sources have noted that public blockchains are especially vulnerable, as public keys become visible on-chain once transactions are completed, potentially allowing future quantum computers to derive private keys from this information.
Although the current funding initiative does not signal an immediate threat of quantum decryption, it underscores a pivotal shift: governments now recognize that quantum capabilities are too critical to be solely governed by private market dynamics. As a reference point, Bitcoin is currently trading at approximately $77,476 per digital token.


