Quantum Computing Goes Mainstream: What 2 Executive Orders Mean for Investors

Key Takeaways

  • President Trump’s June 2026 quantum executive orders and recent CHIPS Act funding have elevated quantum computing to a national priority, strengthening the investment case for diversified exposure through the WisdomTree Quantum Computing Fund (WQTM).
  • Although key engineering challenges remain, recent advances from Quantinuum, IonQ and others suggest the science is progressing in step with growing government support.
  • New federal post-quantum cryptography deadlines create a multi-year opportunity for cybersecurity firms, while forthcoming Department of Energy specifications could help identify the next quantum industry leaders.

On June 22, 2026, President Trump sat in the Oval Office surrounded by the presidents of Google and IBM and signed two executive orders on quantum computing.1 That image—tech’s biggest names flanking a president at one of the most symbolically loaded desks in the world—tells investors something important before they read a single word of the policy text.

Quantum computing has arrived as a matter of national priority, not just scientific curiosity.

For investors who have been tracking this space, the signing is a continuation of a policy architecture that has been assembling with surprising speed. Last month, the Commerce Department announced $2 billion in CHIPS Act funding for quantum companies, taking equity stakes in nine firms in exchange.2 Now come two executive orders that define what the government wants built and how fast it expects the broader ecosystem to respond. The pieces are snapping into place.

Two Orders, One Strategic Logic

The first order, formally titled “Ushering in the Next Frontier of Quantum Innovation,” creates the Quantum Computer for Application Development and Discovery Science effort (QC-ADDS), a national mission to build a quantum computer powerful enough to perform genuinely transformative scientific calculations, with at least one such machine delivered to a Department of Energy national laboratory. The White House has indicated this could happen by 2028. The Department of Energy has 90 days to publish the technical specifications, which could include:

  • The required qubit counts
  • Fidelity thresholds
  • Target application classes

Those specifications matter because they will effectively set the procurement roadmap for the companies the government just invested in.

The second order, “Securing the Nation Against Advanced Cryptographic Attacks,” starts from the uncomfortable recognition that quantum computers, once sufficiently powerful, will be able to break the encryption algorithms that protect virtually everything in the digital economy. I often think of the scene in the movie The Imitation Game where the machine breaks the German Enigma code as a parallel.3

The order sets binding deadlines, for example:

  • Federal high-value systems must transition to post-quantum cryptography for key establishment by the end of 2030 and for digital signatures by 2031.
  • A pilot migration must be completed by the end of 2027.
  • Federal contractors face the same 2030 deadline under proposed procurement rule changes.

The paired logic is deliberate. The first order bets that quantum capability will arrive. The second accepts that this success creates an obligation to harden everything the technology could eventually break. One funds the offense; the other prepares the defense. As National Cyber Director Sean Cairncross put it at the signing ceremony, innovation and security have to be balanced as quantum computing moves forward.