The U.S. is effectively designating the quantum industry as strategic infrastructure
The U.S. Department of Commerce has announced the allocation of more than $2 billion under the CHIPS Act to support the development of the quantum computing sector. The funding is directed toward the largest U.S. developers of quantum technologies and infrastructure solutions.
The key point is not just the amount of investment, but the support model itself. For the first time, the government is systematically acquiring equity stakes in commercial quantum companies, taking minority shares in exchange for funding. For the U.S. market, this is no longer merely research support, but a full-fledged industrial strategy.
Washington openly views quantum technologies as one of the key areas of technological competition in the coming years. The goal is to build its own computing and manufacturing base — from developing architectures to producing specialized chips and constructing infrastructure within the country.
The market reacted to the news with a rise in the stock prices of companies in the sector, which further underscores the shift in attitude toward the industry: quantum computing is increasingly viewed not as an experimental field, but as a strategic area with long-term commercial potential.
Against this backdrop, the industry’s shift from discussing theoretical possibilities to the practical implementation of technologies in real-world computing and financial processes is particularly noticeable.
For QWAY, this trend confirms the relevance of its chosen direction. The development of proprietary computing infrastructure, the integration of quantum methods into data analysis, and the construction of adaptive models for processing market information are already becoming part of the applied technology landscape.
The quantum sector is gradually shaping a new level of global digital infrastructure — and this process has already begun to extend beyond research laboratories.
QWAY Quantum Technology

