Key Points
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Quarterly-filed Form 13Fs provide a concise snapshot of the stocks Wall Street’s savviest money managers (and businesses) have been buying and selling.
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E-commerce titan Amazon ended 2025 overseeing a $3.5 billion investment portfolio — including a new position in Wall Street’s premier quantum computing stock, IonQ.
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Although quantum computing offers a sizable addressable market, this next-big-thing trend is rife with red flags.
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NYSE: IONQ
IonQ

Market Cap
$12B
Today’s Change
(8.98%) $2.81
Current Price
$34.11
Price as of February 13, 2026 at 4:00 PM ET
For example, Amazon (AMZN 0.39%) is best known for its world-leading e-commerce platform and its pole position in cloud infrastructure services through Amazon Web Services. But it’s also overseeing a $3.5 billion investment portfolio, as of the end of 2025. While this portfolio plays a relatively small role in Amazon’s success, it pays, from an investment standpoint, to know where one of Wall Street’s “Magnificent Seven” is putting its capital to work (beyond research and development).
In the December-ended quarter, Amazon’s 13F shows it opened a new position in Wall Street’s hottest quantum computing stock, IonQ (IONQ +8.98%). While this might seem cause for celebration, there are ample reasons to temper your expectations for IonQ and its peers.
Quantum computing stocks have taken Wall Street by storm
One of the easiest ways to dazzle Wall Street and investors is with a jaw-dropping addressable market — and quantum computing doesn’t disappoint.
The prospect of using specialized computers to solve complex problems that classical computers can’t handle is an estimated $450 billion to $850 billion global opportunity by 2040, according to analysts at Boston Consulting Group. Even if this wide-range estimate is only remotely in the ballpark, it would still indicate a sizable addressable market awaits IonQ and its peers.
Quantum Computing 1 Year Returns 🤯$RGTI +6,217% $QBTS +3,912%$QUBT +2,798%$IONQ +670% pic.twitter.com/tzSN5ZqVjj
— Connor Bates (@ConnorJBates_) October 13, 2025
Another way to excite investors is through the fear of missing out, commonly known as “FOMO.” As of mid-October 2025, trailing 12-month returns for the s of IonQ, Rigetti Computing, D-Wave Quantum, and Quantum Computing Inc. ranged from 670% to as much as 6,217%!
Brand-name clients and collaborations have also helped quantum computing stocks put themselves on the map over the last year. As an example, Amazon’s quantum cloud service Braket and Microsoft‘s Azure Quantum are both enabling clients to access IonQ’s and Rigetti’s respective quantum computers. These services are being used to run simulations and test quantum hardware.
But the biggest jolt of excitement for quantum computing stocks came from the release of JPMorgan Chase‘s $1.5 trillion Security and Resiliency Initiative in mid-October. America’s largest bank by total assets outlined 27 sub-areas for financing and/or investment over the next decade — quantum computing among them.
Given Amazon’s history of investing in the businesses it’s partnered with, the company’s 6,671-purchase of IonQ stock during the fourth quarter, worth nearly $300,000, makes sense.

Image source: Getty Images.
History is no friend of IonQ (or other quantum computing stocks)
However, altering the timeline changes the story. Although Amazon made a relatively small purchase of IonQ stock in the December-ended quarter, it had previously disposed of its entire 854,207-stake in IonQ during the third quarter.
To venture a guess, Amazon ly chose to lock in historic short-term gains in IonQ stock during the third quarter and used the significant pullback in its s during the fourth quarter to reenter the position, albeit to a much smaller degree.
While the argument can still be made that Amazon’s purchase of IonQ stock is a positive, history hasn’t been kind to companies at the forefront of game-changing technologies.
One reason Amazon may regret reentering this position is that every next-big-thing trend over the last three decades has dealt with a bubble-bursting event. Every game-changing technology has required time to mature and evolve.
Quantum computers are still in the very early stages of commercialization, with IonQ the most successful in terms of generating revenue. But this isn’t just an adoption issue — it’s an optimization one. It’s going to take years before businesses determine how to maximize their sales and profits from quantum computers. In other words, the table is once again set for investors to overestimate the adoption and/or optimization of a game-changing technology.
Expand

NYSE: IONQ
IonQ
Today’s Change
(8.98%) $2.81
Current Price
$34.11
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$12B
Day’s Range
$30.85 – $34.65
52wk Range
$17.88 – $84.64
Volume
22M
Avg Vol
20M
Gross Margin
-747.41%
Building on this point, neither IonQ nor its peers are anywhere close to generating a recurring profit. With analysts estimating that it’ll be several years before quantum computers are more cost-effective for practical problem-solving than classical computers, IonQ is expected to lose money and burn cash. This is a recipe for -based dilution that can ultimately harm IonQ’s holders.
History also tells us that members of the Magnificent Seven want their piece of the pie with game-changing innovations. While Amazon and Microsoft have been content to give their quantum cloud customers access to IonQ’s specialized computers, we’ve also seen Amazon, Microsoft, and Alphabet introduce their respective quantum processing units (QPUs) over the last 14 months.
The Magnificent Seven debuting and testing QPUs is one step closer to these cash-rich companies grabbing away from unproven pure-play stocks IonQ. The barrier to entry in quantum computing is smaller than most investors realize, meaning IonQ’s leadership position is tenuous, at best.
Though Amazon’s welcoming of IonQ’s stock back into its investment portfolio is bound to make waves, investors would be wise to temper their expectations.
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About the Author
Sean Williams is a data-driven Motley Fool contributing analyst who’s been investing for 27 years and has penned north of 15,000 articles. You’ll find him at the intersection of politics and investing tackling macroeconomic topics of interest (Social Security and Donald Trump’s economic/tax policies), analyzing which stocks billionaire investors (e.g., Warren Buffett) are buying and selling, and digging into how the world’s most-influential businesses and trends — everything from the evolution of artificial intelligence (AI) to the next stock split — are changing Wall Street. He holds a B.A. in Economics from the University of California, San Diego.
Stocks Mentioned

IonQ
NYSE: IONQ
$34.11 (+8.98%) $+2.81

Amazon
NASDAQ: AMZN
$198.82 (0.39%) $0.78

Microsoft
NASDAQ: MSFT
$401.20 (0.16%) $0.64

Alphabet
NASDAQ: GOOGL
$305.72 (1.06%) $3.28

JPMorgan Chase
NYSE: JPM
$302.46 (0.06%) $0.18

Alphabet
NASDAQ: GOOG
$306.02 (1.08%) $3.35

Quantum Computing
NASDAQ: QUBT
$8.47 (+3.42%) $+0.28

Rigetti Computing
NASDAQ: RGTI
$16.02 (+6.91%) $+1.03

D-Wave Quantum
NYSE: QBTS
$19.66 (+4.46%) $+0.84
*Average returns of all recommendations since inception. Cost basis and return based on previous market day close.
Sumber Artikel:
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