Honeywell announced on Wednesday that its quantum computing business, Quantinuum, has confidentially submitted documentation for a U.S. initial public offering. Honeywell retains majority ownership of Quantinuum, which previously supplied paperwork to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in February.
The company did not release financial specifics tied to the potential offering. Publicly available valuation information shows that Quantinuum was valued at $10 billion during a fundraising round that took place in September.
Context and timing
The confidential filing arrives as activity in the market for new listings begins to pick up following a brief pause in March. That lull was driven, according to the information disclosed, by volatility related to the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran and a broader selloff in software stocks, developments that prompted many prospective issuers to delay public offerings.
The move also occurs amid a broader acceleration in efforts to advance quantum computing technology, a field characterized by competition to develop systems that can solve certain complex problems much faster than classical supercomputers.
Operations, customers and leadership
Quantinuum positions itself as a full-stack quantum computing provider. Its technologies are reported to be in use by Honeywell as well as by Airbus, BMW Group, HSBC and JPMorgan Chase. The company was formed in 2021 following a separation from Honeywell and a merger with Cambridge Quantum.
Corporate governance and executive leadership are noted in the filing materials: Quantinuum is chaired by Honeywell's chief executive officer, Vimal Kapur, and is led operationally by Rajeeb Hazra, an executive with prior experience at Intel.
What remains uncertain
Key details about the potential offering, including the size and timing of any public sale of shares, were not disclosed. The confidential nature of the filing means further information will depend on subsequent public submissions or announcements.