I want to start off by saying this isn’t financial advice and just my opinion.
Let us dissect this recent earnings and look more critically, I don’t want retail left holding the bag.
Ionq is trading at a price to sales ratio (P/S) of 83.5 given its 2026 sales. Let’s put this into perspective and compare with other companies. P/S ratio is one of the ways to value unprofitable growth companies. I’m using forward P/S ratio.
Snowflake is trading at 13-14 times P/S
Crowdstrike is trading at 16.5 times P/S
Nvidia is trading at 30 times P/S
CoreWeave is trading at 9.3 times P/S, you’ve seen how the market has reacted when it hasn’t delivered perfectly on earnings.
Ionq reported a massive $753.7 million GAAP net income.
$949.6 million came from a change in fair value of warrant liabilities. This is purely a financial adjustment on paper. $24.8 million paper tax benefit as well. When you strip these things they actually have more than a $510 million paper loss on net income.
Yes they increased revenue a lot but it doesn’t matter if you continue to burn cash without a path to profitability.
For this quarter they reported a -109% loss margin and for 2026 they are reporting a -136% loss margin. They might be growing but there loss is growing not slowing down.
Let’s talk about their revenue.
60% comes from commercial customers
40% government and lesser so academic institutions.
A lot of their commercial revenue comes from one off hardware sales and massive infrequent consulting revenue. This company needs reoccurring revenue, not revenue they have to continuously hunt for and could change from year to year.
Ionq SEC filings explicitly warn investors that many of their contracts have milestone clauses, meaning if they don’t reach those milestones they could lose it.
The government contracts have clauses that include standard provisions that allow them to terminate or modify the deals at any time. Given trump and the current political situation this is shaky.
Over the last two years insiders have dumped 11 million shares worth $410 million.
Personally I don’t think this share price will hold up in a risk off environment especially if we enter a recession.
Edit: Grammar mistakes and typos
My analysis of Ionq and its recent earnings
byu/alemorg ininvesting
Posted by alemorg
1 Comment
Yeah this is a solid breakdown, the P/S ratio comparison really puts it into perspective. That 83.5x is absolutely wild when you look at it next to Snowflake at 13-14x
The warrant liability thing is such a red flag too – like congrats on your “massive net income” that’s basically just accounting magic. When the actual operating business is bleeding half a billion that’s not exactly inspiring confidence
That insider selling over 2 years is pretty telling though, $410M is serious money and usually means they know something retail doesn’t