Quantum scale-up Pasqal plans $2B SPAC listing, promises to ‘remain French’
Amid enduring investor appetite for all things quantum, another European company in the space is graduating from the private markets.
The merger values Pasqal at $2 billion, pre-money.
Pasqal is a full-stack quantum computing company taking on Big Tech.
It generates annual revenue in the tens of millions from selling hardware, software, and cloud services to labs and industry partners. The SPAC deal comes as Pasqal’s North American counterparts, which took a similar route to the public markets, have seen their stocks surge in recent months. markets offer companies like Pasqal the sort of scale and revenue multiples that are harder to come by at home in Europe, not to mention the cash they need for the long journey to fully realize the potential of quantum computing. But Pasqal (like IQM) is planning a dual U.
The dual-listing could be one way Pasqal is trying to reassure its French backers.
The quantum computing company also intends to appoint “a new non-executive chair of French nationality” to its board.
Combes’ exit package proved so controversial that it was eventually reduced by half.
Combes’ subsequent moves have gone some way toward rehabilitating his reputation in French tech circles. After replacing Marcelo Claure as Sprint’s CEO, he headed SoftBank Group International, where he championed French scale-ups like Swile.
But he left that position after only five months amid a wave of departures in 2022.
Pasqal is no stranger to executive reshuffles.
Reaffirming its commitment to France may bring more intangible benefits for Pasqal, too.
Also, not being an American company in the current geopolitical climate has a good chance of opening doors, as French AI lab Mistral AI has found. But no company can last long without a good product.
The race is intense in quantum computing since competing approaches to the tech hold equal promise.
IQM, for instance, bets on superconducting qubits, while Pasqal follows the neutral atom path championed by its co-founder, physics Nobel laureate Alain Aspect. This technical foundation will play a key role for Pasqal, which plans to keep investing heavily in R&D to develop a fault-tolerant quantum computer by the end of the decade. Such advancements will be essential to unlocking applications in areas like drug discovery, healthcare, and cybersecurity.
6 billion, giving the company cash to put toward its goal of doubling production capacity within 24 months
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