First BlackRock poured $1.7 billion into quantum…
Then Nvidia invested $1.6 billion…
Now Jeff Bezos is placing his own quantum bet.
The world’s richest investors are all moving into quantum. And the biggest gains will go to those who get in earliest.
Go here for my #1 quantum Pre-IPO.
Bezos’ personal investment firm just joined a massive $300 million bet on a private quantum computing startup called Oratomic.
Oratomic is building the world’s first fault-tolerant quantum computer… a machine that can catch and correct its own errors.
The startup came out of stealth just four months ago. And it’s already pulled in one of the biggest funding rounds in quantum computing.
The investor list reads like a who’s who of Silicon Valley:
Bezos Expeditions.
Khosla Ventures, the legendary VC firm. Vinod Khosla says it’s his firm’s largest initial investment ever, “as we did in OpenAI.”
Bain Capital. The co-founder of Robinhood. Even quantum company Infleqtion put money in.
Why are they all piling in?
Oratomic’s founding team comes from Harvard, Caltech, Berkeley, Amazon, and Google.
And their research suggests a useful quantum computer may need just 10,000 qubits… not the millions scientists previously estimated.
In other words: quantum computing could arrive years ahead of schedule.
Even the founders admit they used to believe useful quantum computing was far away. Their own research changed their minds.
That’s why the smartest investors in the world are rushing into private quantum companies BEFORE they go public.
Bezos gets access to these deals.
You and I don’t.
These rounds are reserved for billionaires and venture funds.
Not this one though.
It’s a private quantum company I call The Quantum Keystone.
Its technology could be critical to securing banks, digital assets, medical records, and our nation’s infrastructure and defense systems from quantum computing threats.
And unlike Oratomic, its final Pre-IPO financing is open to every American.
No accreditation required.
Shares are less than $5.
And my research suggests they could jump as much as 300% after it lists on the Nasdaq or the NYSE.
Ian Wyatt