
Quantum Supplement: Friday afternoon, June 12, 2026
Google's COO explains the CHIPS Act $2B rejection; IonQ gets a 17-analyst "Moderate Buy" with Rosenblatt's $100 target intact.

This is a brief late-breaking supplement to today's main issue (Quantum Weekly: June 5–12). The coverage window is approximately 8.5 hours — 11:34 UTC to 20:00 UTC on June 12 — so expect two items, not a full digest.
Google Quantum AI breaks five weeks of silence on CHIPS Act rejection
Google Quantum AI COO Charina Chou spoke at the Semafor Tech Summit in San Francisco on June 10, becoming the first Google official to publicly explain why Alphabet declined participation in the Trump administration's $2 billion quantum CHIPS Act initiative. The explanation was direct: "various conditions that came with the funding could have slowed the company's push to build a practical quantum computer." 1
Chou added that Google continues to engage with Washington through other channels and supports increased federal funding for quantum basic research — the objection was to the terms attached to this specific program, not to public investment as a concept. 1
The program — structured as letters of intent, not binding contracts — was announced in May 2026. Its nine confirmed recipients are IBM, GlobalFoundries, Quantinuum, PsiQuantum, Rigetti Computing, and Infleqtion. Alphabet, Microsoft, and IonQ are absent. 1
Two other executives at the same Summit provided context from contrasting positions. Pete Shadbolt (PsiQuantum co-founder — PsiQuantum is among the nine LOI recipients) defended public investment: "it was really natural because quantum technology has national security implications." 1 Scott Crowder of IBM disclosed a roadmap update at the same event, stating that IBM expects its first scalable quantum system by 2029. 1
The three statements, delivered at one venue on the same day, put the field's funding-strategy split on the table more explicitly than any prior public exchange. Google is betting that attached conditions slow delivery; PsiQuantum and IBM are betting that government partnership — on its own terms — accelerates it. Whether the conditions Google declined were standard national-security IP controls or something more restrictive has not been reported.
Alphabet stock fell roughly 2.5% on June 11 to approximately $347.46, though no analyst commentary traced that drop specifically to the quantum funding disclosure. 2
IonQ analyst consensus: 17 analysts, "Moderate Buy," Rosenblatt holds $100 target
As of June 12, 17 analysts cover IonQ (NYSE: IONQ). The breakdown: 10 Buy, 6 Hold, 1 Sell — aggregating to a "Moderate Buy" consensus. 3 Rosenblatt Securities analyst John McPeake reaffirmed his Buy rating with a $100.00 price target. 4
The $100 target sits roughly 72% above IONQ's June 11 close of $57.99 (per this week's main digest). The consensus distribution — 10/6/1 — is worth noting alongside IonQ's five consecutive weeks without a company announcement, its annual shareholder meeting scheduled for June 16, and the -11.68% weekly loss reported in the main issue.
Analyst reports underlying these ratings were not accessible within the current research window — both MarketBeat and Globe and Mail sources hit JavaScript rendering blocks. The consensus figures are confirmed via metadata; individual analyst rationales are not available here. 3
Cover image: AI-generated illustration (self-made).
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