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IBM on Thursday announced plans to invest more than $10 billion in quantum computing over the next five years, targeting what it says would be the first large-scale fault-tolerant quantum computer by 2029. The disclosure, made in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, sent shares climbing as much as 5.3% in morning trading.reuters
The investment will span research and development, capital expenditures, ecosystem partnerships, manufacturing expansion, and mergers and acquisitions tied to quantum technologies, according to the filing.thequantuminsider
The announcement builds on a deal revealed last week in which IBM and the U.S. Department of Commerce signed a letter of intent to create Anderon, America’s first purpose-built quantum chip foundry. Headquartered in Albany, New York, Anderon will operate as a standalone company running a 300-millimeter quantum wafer fab and offering manufacturing services to competing quantum hardware vendors.tomshardware
Under the terms of that arrangement, the Department of Commerce will provide a proposed $1 billion CHIPS Act R&D award while IBM contributes a matching $1 billion in cash, along with intellectual property, assets, and staff. The federal investment was the centerpiece of a broader $2 billion quantum portfolio split among nine companies — the largest single quantum R&D commitment in U.S. history.ibm
Separately on Thursday, IBM and Red Hat announced Project Lightwell, a $5 billion commitment deploying more than 20,000 engineers and advanced AI capabilities to help enterprises secure open-source software. The initiative will establish a “clearinghouse” — a security coordination layer where companies can confidentially report flaws, receive validated patches, and share fixes with the broader open-source community.ibm
The service, available through commercial subscriptions, aims to address growing threats posed by AI models capable of discovering and exploiting software vulnerabilities.freemalaysiatoday
Together, the quantum and open-source announcements represent a combined $15 billion technology push — a sweeping wager on quantum infrastructure and AI-era cybersecurity. IBM has repeatedly stated it expects large-scale fault-tolerant quantum systems to emerge near the end of the decade, and the investment timeline aligns with that roadmap. Citigroup is among the initial collaborators on Project Lightwell.gurufocus