73 AI-extracted insights from 11 sources — podcasts, YouTube channels, and X/Twitter accounts.
Showing insights 51–73 of 73.
Noted as being part of a 'very strong' quantum computing sector, with the stock hitting an all-time high.
The speaker made an aggressive bearish call, stating it's a 'great price to short' and calling it a 'fucking worthless company', believing it has no intrinsic value.
The stock's failure to rise on 'pretty good data' is described as a 'very very concerning' signal and a major red flag, indicating a lack of buyer interest and strong selling pressure.
Described as 'still a short' with questionable long-term value. The speaker dismisses the 'permanent call option value' argument for holding the stock.
The host is extremely bearish, buying puts, mockingly calling it 'Spaghetti Regretti,' and grouping it with other quantum companies he considers to be scams.
The speaker has 'reshorted' the company as part of his strongly bearish theme against the quantum computing sector.
The speaker sarcastically referred to their earnings call as 'super bullish,' strongly implying the results were poor.
The speaker is short the stock as part of a bearish thesis on the entire quantum computing sector. However, he views them as the 'most honest' of the group for publicly stating that real revenue from quantum computing is not currently feasible.
Rallied along with other quantum computing names on the initial (and later clarified) news of Amazon's stake in IONQ, showing sensitivity to sector-wide news.
Mentioned as a 'weak company' as part of a strong bearish call on the entire publicly traded quantum computing sector, which is believed to lack viable business models.
Identified as a shorting opportunity within the 'frothy' quantum computing sector, which the speaker believes is a bubble that will deflate.
The speaker is actively shorting the stock as part of a bearish basket of quantum computing companies and is holding the short position into earnings despite it being a losing trade.
Mentioned as part of the quantum computing sector where the speaker is skeptical about near-term prospects due to a lack of revenue to back up the hype.
Viewed with skepticism as part of the 'quantum computing mini bubble' that the speaker is broadly shorting.
Actively shorted by the speaker, who views the entire quantum computing sector as a 'fantasy investment' and a speculative bubble with no real institutional interest or near-term fundamentals.
The speaker holds a significant short position, viewing a recent price increase from a 'bullshit press release' as unfounded and expecting the stock to decline.
Viewed as part of a hype-driven bubble, with high stock prices and trading volume disconnected from the underlying reality of the technology's current capabilities. The analyst is extremely bearish on the entire sector.
Surged 19% on news that it had demonstrated a 'multi-chip quantum computer,' highlighting the market's appetite for speculative technology.
Mentioned with a negative outlook as part of a group of quantum stocks the speaker is actively short-selling, believing the sector is 'over'.
The speaker is short the stock as part of a broader bearish thesis against the publicly-traded quantum computing space.
Included in the speaker's 'extremely bearish' view on the entire quantum computing sector, which is described as a 'sham' with no viable path to significant revenue or profitability.
Described as 'conservative and realistic' and a relatively safer bet compared to its quantum computing peers, which are viewed as scams.
The stock was dragged down by negative news from sector peer Quantum Computing Inc. (QBT).
Noted as being part of a 'very strong' quantum computing sector, with the stock hitting an all-time high.
The speaker made an aggressive bearish call, stating it's a 'great price to short' and calling it a 'fucking worthless company', believing it has no intrinsic value.
The stock's failure to rise on 'pretty good data' is described as a 'very very concerning' signal and a major red flag, indicating a lack of buyer interest and strong selling pressure.
Described as 'still a short' with questionable long-term value. The speaker dismisses the 'permanent call option value' argument for holding the stock.
The host is extremely bearish, buying puts, mockingly calling it 'Spaghetti Regretti,' and grouping it with other quantum companies he considers to be scams.
The speaker has 'reshorted' the company as part of his strongly bearish theme against the quantum computing sector.
The speaker sarcastically referred to their earnings call as 'super bullish,' strongly implying the results were poor.
The speaker is short the stock as part of a bearish thesis on the entire quantum computing sector. However, he views them as the 'most honest' of the group for publicly stating that real revenue from quantum computing is not currently feasible.
Rallied along with other quantum computing names on the initial (and later clarified) news of Amazon's stake in IONQ, showing sensitivity to sector-wide news.
Mentioned as a 'weak company' as part of a strong bearish call on the entire publicly traded quantum computing sector, which is believed to lack viable business models.
Identified as a shorting opportunity within the 'frothy' quantum computing sector, which the speaker believes is a bubble that will deflate.
The speaker is actively shorting the stock as part of a bearish basket of quantum computing companies and is holding the short position into earnings despite it being a losing trade.
Mentioned as part of the quantum computing sector where the speaker is skeptical about near-term prospects due to a lack of revenue to back up the hype.
Viewed with skepticism as part of the 'quantum computing mini bubble' that the speaker is broadly shorting.
Actively shorted by the speaker, who views the entire quantum computing sector as a 'fantasy investment' and a speculative bubble with no real institutional interest or near-term fundamentals.
The speaker holds a significant short position, viewing a recent price increase from a 'bullshit press release' as unfounded and expecting the stock to decline.
Viewed as part of a hype-driven bubble, with high stock prices and trading volume disconnected from the underlying reality of the technology's current capabilities. The analyst is extremely bearish on the entire sector.
Surged 19% on news that it had demonstrated a 'multi-chip quantum computer,' highlighting the market's appetite for speculative technology.
Mentioned with a negative outlook as part of a group of quantum stocks the speaker is actively short-selling, believing the sector is 'over'.
The speaker is short the stock as part of a broader bearish thesis against the publicly-traded quantum computing space.
Included in the speaker's 'extremely bearish' view on the entire quantum computing sector, which is described as a 'sham' with no viable path to significant revenue or profitability.
Described as 'conservative and realistic' and a relatively safer bet compared to its quantum computing peers, which are viewed as scams.
The stock was dragged down by negative news from sector peer Quantum Computing Inc. (QBT).