Sign in

You're signed outSign in or to get full access.

IonQ - Q2 2024

August 7, 2024

Executive Summary

  • Revenue of $11.4M, above the high end of Q2 guidance ($7.6–$9.2M), up 106% YoY; bookings of $9.0M; net loss of $37.6M; Adjusted EBITDA loss of $23.7M.
  • Full-year revenue guidance raised to $38–$42M; Q3 revenue guidance set at $9–$12M; FY bookings reiterated at $75–$95M.
  • Technical milestones: 99.9% two-qubit native gate fidelity on barium qubits and an industry-first partial error correction technique for Clifford gates, pointing to nearer-term application viability.
  • Commercial catalysts: ARLIS $5.7M design phase win (with expectation of next phase $12M), AWS access contract extension, and progress on Forte Enterprise systems in Basel and Seattle.

What Went Well and What Went Wrong

What Went Well

  • Revenue beat driven by faster progress on percentage-of-completion contracts; $11.4M recognized, surpassing the guidance high end.
  • Breakthrough 99.9% two-qubit native gate fidelity on barium qubits and a novel partial error correction technique reducing Clifford gate errors, enabling more accurate near-term algorithms.
  • Commercial traction: ARLIS blind quantum computing system design win ($5.7M initial), AWS contract extension, and assembly/start of construction on Forte Enterprise systems in Europe and Seattle. “We have entered a new era of commercialization for quantum networking” (context carried into Q3).

What Went Wrong

  • Operating expenses elevated as IonQ scales R&D, sales/marketing, and G&A; total operating costs $60.3M (+56% YoY), R&D $31.2M (+57% YoY).
  • Adjusted EBITDA loss widened YoY to $(23.7)M (vs. $(19.4)M) as investment pace increased; stock-based compensation rose to $21.0M in Q2 (vs. $11.3M).
  • Bookings remain lumpy and timing-sensitive; Q2 bookings were $9.0M, with management reiterating back-half weighting and uncertainty on quarterly closings.

Transcript

Operator (participant)

Greetings, and welcome to IonQ's second quarter 2024 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in listen-only mode. A question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance during the conference, please press Star then zero on your telephone keypad. As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host, Jordan Shapiro. Please go ahead, sir.

Jordan Shapiro (VP of Financial Planning and Analysis and Head of Investor Relations)

Good afternoon, everyone, and welcome to IonQ's second quarter 2024 earnings call. My name is Jordan Shapiro, and I'm the Vice President of Financial Planning and Analysis and Head of Investor Relations here at IonQ. I'm pleased to be joined on today's call by Peter Chapman, IonQ's President and Chief Executive Officer, Thomas Kramer, our Chief Financial Officer, and Dr. Dean Kassmann, our Senior Vice President of Engineering and Technology. By now, everyone should have access to the company's second quarter 2024 earnings press release issued this afternoon, which is available on the Investor Relations section of our website at investors.ionq.com. Please note that on today's call, management will refer to Adjusted EBITDA, which is a non-GAAP financial measure.

While the company believes this non-GAAP financial measure provides useful information for investors, the presentation of this information is not intended to be considered in isolation or as a substitute for the financial information presented in accordance with GAAP. You are directed to our press release for a reconciliation of Adjusted EBITDA to its closest comparable GAAP measure. During the call, we will discuss our business outlook and make forward-looking statements. These comments are based on our beliefs as of today. Actual events or results could differ materially from the outlook and other forward-looking statements due to a number of risks and uncertainties, including those mentioned in our 10-Q filing with the SEC this week. We undertake no obligation to revise any statements to reflect changes that occur after this call, except as required by law. Now, I will turn it over to Peter Chapman, President and CEO of IonQ.

Peter?

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

Thanks, Jordan, and thank you to everyone joining today's call. There are a lot of exciting announcements to share today. We will discuss our recent technical breakthroughs that we believe bring the quantum era closer than it has ever been and our compelling commercial momentum that demonstrates how we're working with customers. Let's dive straight in. First, I am excited to say that we have once again exceeded the high end of our revenue range for the quarter, delivering $11.4 million in recognized revenue, which was well above the range of $7.6 million-$9.2 million for the quarter. We also booked $9 million this quarter and are very confident about meeting our bookings goal for the year. Thomas will discuss our financials in more depth.

You have likely heard there is a space race in quantum computing, but what does that really mean? It's a race between different companies, qubit modalities, and countries to produce a quantum computer that can outperform classical computing. The technical problem that bedevils the industry is noise or fidelity in its qubits. This noise can come from the qubits themselves, the environment, or any hardware, like the control electronics, that interact with the qubits. Key to the accuracy of a quantum computer is to increase the fidelity of its qubits and their ability to run more computational gates and larger applications. When any company can achieve enough fidelity and run the applications in a production environment, significant application revenue can start. With this context, I'm excited to announce that IonQ has achieved a two-qubit native gate fidelity of 99.9%, or three nines, in barium.

We chose to move to barium because science suggests it enables higher fidelities than ytterbium, and the better the native gate fidelity, the less error correction in all forms is required. So today's announcement is an important milestone towards even better gate fidelities ahead. To get to better gate fidelity beyond native gate fidelity, other techniques are required. In the past, you've heard us describe quantum error correction, the technique of using additional qubits grouped together to correct each other and produce more reliable results. Error correction is promising, but particularly on non-trapped ion platforms, requires a large volume of qubits. Think tens, hundreds, or even thousands of physical qubits per error-corrected qubit. It also requires many extra gates as overhead, the ratio of which is correlated with the native fidelity of the qubits. So error correction is out of reach for meaningful use in the quantum industry today.

Another technique you've heard about from us is error mitigation, which uses software techniques to improve results without generally requiring additional qubits. Error mitigation is commonly used by the quantum computing companies, but poses difficulties for scaling, given that it often incurs ever-increasing sampling costs that can lengthen the time to solution. Today, I am thrilled to announce IonQ has invented a new industry-first partial error correction technique for an important class of quantum gates used with many different applications. The technique, which reduces the errors for Clifford gates within circuits, offers the potential to supercharge the accuracy of near-term quantum computers, bringing us much closer to commercial advantage.... This Clifford error reduction technique allows for more accurate quantum algorithms, but requires a ratio of only about 3 physical qubits per 1 error-reduced qubit and a modest doubling of gates in the algorithms used.

We plan to offer this feature in our IonQ Tempo systems. With a combination of hardware and software improvements, we believe that we can extend our achievement of 3 nines to production systems in 2025 and bring that to 5 nines in 2025 and 6 nines in 2026 using error correction. This, along with a combination of much larger numbers of physical qubits and improved gate speeds, gives us more confidence about near-term quantum applications and application revenue for IonQ. For some time now, we have been investigating applications where we can deliver significant value and generate significant revenue. At our next earnings call, we will discuss the first of these application areas. While this has been a tremendous quarter for IonQ's technical development, it has been equally exciting on the commercial side of the business.

First, I am delighted to announce that ARLIS, the Applied Research Laboratory for Intelligence and Security, selected IonQ through a competitive bidding process to design two quantum networking node systems for blind quantum computing. Blind quantum computing is a process where quantum computers remain blind to what information is being processed through them and is a key achievement target for the U.S. national security apparatus. In fiscal 2023 and 2024, Congress funded this research for a total of $40 million. The initial phase of the contract is a $5.7 million award for the design of the quantum computers based on IonQ trapped-ion processors. We expect to complete this work by the end of this year. In the next phase of the project, ARLIS plans to have two systems built based on the initial IonQ design.

We feel confident on our bookings guidance for the year, and we're working on several large additional sales for hardware and otherwise, in addition to the ARLIS agreement. What makes us confident is the strength of our repeat customers and our sales team's focus in closing large multi-year deals. Next, we have started final assembly of our first Forte Enterprise system at Quantum Basel, and we now have officially begun construction of two more Forte Enterprise systems in our Seattle, Washington, manufacturing facility. Our investment in our manufacturing is already paying off, now enabling us to build multiple production systems at a time while not tying up significant engineering resources.

I am also pleased to announce that we've extended our contract with AWS to continue to offer our world-class quantum computers via Amazon Braket, the quantum computing service of AWS, to developers everywhere who want to leverage the power of quantum computing. Alongside the AWS contract extension, we have launched an exciting new cloud feature set that includes 24/7 global operations, a new and improved queuing engine, and exclusive reservation windows. These features make it easier than ever for our customers to benefit from IonQ's cutting-edge quantum computers. In summary, this quarter has been another strong success for IonQ. We have proven that our barium qubit technology can achieve three nines of fidelity. We have developed an industry-changing partial error correction technique for error reduction that could bring production applications for quantum even sooner.

We have factored those advancements into an aggressive new roadmap for our continued leadership in the industry, and we are working with customers like ARLIS and AWS to build the next generation of quantum networking and quantum computing applications. And with that, I'd like to pass the call over to Thomas.

Thomas Kramer (CFO)

Thank you, Peter. It has truly been an exciting quarter on the technical and commercial front, and our financials are no exception. Let's walk through this quarter financial results in more detail. As Peter mentioned, we had a strong revenue quarter, recognizing $11.4 million, which is above the high end of the range we previously provided. This over-performance was primarily due to our ability to make more progress than previously anticipated on some of our contracts that use percentage of completion revenue recognition. We also booked $9 million of sales contracts in the second quarter. As we have mentioned in prior earnings calls, we anticipate lumpiness in our bookings since it is difficult to predict quarter to quarter or even in some cases year to year, exactly when a particular sale will materialize. We remain confident in our bookings target for the year.

Moving down the income statement, for Q2 2024, our total operating costs and expenses for the second quarter were $60.3 million, up 56% from $38.6 million in the prior period, but within our plan for the year. To break this down further, our research and development costs for the second quarter were $31.2 million, up 57% from $19.9 million in the prior period. Recall that we are investing heavily in R&D and given anticipated demand of building more systems than previously projected this year. Our sales and marketing costs in the second quarter were $6.1 million, up 72% from $3.6 million in the prior period. This increase was due to us growing both our marketing and our sales teams as we continue investing into our commercial efforts.

Our general and administrative costs in the second quarter were $13.1 million, up 19% from $10.9 million in the prior period. These increases were primarily driven by an increase of $1.9 million in payroll-related expenses. All of this resulted in a net loss of $37.6 million in the second quarter, compared to $43.7 million in the prior period. Accounting for warrants is confusing to many. This is why we have always pointed out the impact they have on our results. These current 2024 Q2 results include a non-cash gain of $6.6 million for the second quarter, related to the fair value of our warrant liabilities.

These results also include growth in stock-based compensation expense related to our headcount growth, which was $21 million for the second quarter, compared to $11.3 million in the prior period. We saw an Adjusted EBITDA loss for the second quarter of $23.7 million, compared to a $19.4 million loss in the prior period. We continue to project an Adjusted EBITDA loss for the year of $110.5 million. Turning now to our balance sheet. Cash, cash equivalents and investments as of June 30, 2024, were $402 million. We continue to believe this cash position is the strongest of any publicly traded company focused exclusively on full stack quantum computing.

Importantly, while we have increased IonQ's run rate in recent years, we are offsetting this by beginning to collect on large payments from IonQ's customers, including those who have purchased full systems. Our run rate increases are largely related to employee costs, as we have worked rapidly to bring the best quantum talent in the world to IonQ. It is also worth mentioning that a significant portion of our investment in setting up manufacturing is now behind us. We increasingly look to focus on conservative spending and ramping up sales of large deals. Now, turning to our financial outlook. We are pleased to announce that we will be raising our revenue guidance for the full year of 2024 to a range of $38 million-$42 million, reflecting increased confidence in our progress on our percentage of completion contracts.

We currently expect revenue for the third quarter of between $9 million and $12 million. We remain confident in our 2024 bookings guidance of between $75 million and $95 million. Back to you, Peter.

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

Thank you, Thomas. In closing, IonQ has yet again pushed the boundaries of the quantum computing industry this quarter, bringing us even closer to the quantum era. Our technical team demonstrated our highest qubit fidelities yet, introduced a paradigm-shifting technique for error reduction, and unveiled an aggressive new roadmap to continue our technical leadership. Commercially, our exciting new work with customers like ARLIS and AWS gives us increased confidence, not just in meeting our bookings targets for the year, but also in the long-term potential of our quantum computing and quantum networking products. Financially, we greatly exceeded the high end of our revenue range for the quarter and posted a solid $9 million in bookings that we believe will propel us towards our goals for the year.

To build on our strong position in the quantum market, we will pursue strategic partnerships and other opportunities, strengthening our ecosystem and benefiting our customers, shareholders, and other stakeholders. We look forward to a great Q3 and the rest of the year ahead with our team, our customers, our partners, and our investors. With that, I would like to turn it over to the operator for our question-and-answer session.

Operator (participant)

Thank you, sir. At this time, we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star, then one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star and then two if you would like to remove your question from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up your handset before pressing the star keys. Again, if you would like to ask a question, please press star and then one now. The first question we have comes from David Williams of The Benchmark Company. Please go ahead.

David Williams (Analyst)

Hey, good afternoon. Thanks for letting me ask a question, and congrats on the really strong progress here. Maybe Peter, maybe first, can you give maybe just a little more color on the partial error mitigation scheme that you'd mentioned earlier? How does that maybe change your roadmap? And is this an innovation that you had seen and had been working towards, or is this something that maybe has developed as you've worked towards other error mitigation? Just trying to understand the innovation here and how we should think about this type of development going forward.

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

I tell you what, we'll tag-team this one. I have Dean here with me as well. So Dean, I'll let you talk about the technology, and maybe I'll take the business.

Dean Kassmann (SVP of Engineering and Technology)

... Yeah. So right now, this is something that we've been working on for a while, right? We've been building up our error correction team and the experts that we have through kind of just continued hiring and trying to build out that part of our research and kind of development team. From a technical perspective, this is a technique that has been talked about before in terms of high-level approaches, where you're not trying to achieve full fault tolerance, but instead, you're trying to target those parts of the system and those gates that are causing the most problems. This technique targets what are called Clifford gates, which are comprised of many different applications or make up many different circuits that are used to solve different applications.

And so the Clifford gates are one of the noisiest gates in many quantum computers, and so this technique allows us to reduce the most noisy part of those circuits so that you can end up with basically better results at the end of the day. And so it's going to factor into the way we think about approaching applications, the kind of applications that are accessible. So what this, at the end of the day, does is make a larger set of applications reachable earlier than we would have earlier thought.

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

I'll just add, to add a little bit to it, which is, this plus many of the other things that we have going, really starting to give us confidence in kind of the timeframe for meaningful applications and actual revenue, you know, significant revenue generation. You know, frankly speaking, I think up to this point, you know, it's been early for significant investments in applications. Some companies started application development ten years ago, even though there wasn't quantum computers yet. So, this is kind of, I think, a significant milestone for us in terms of getting to confidence that now is the time for application development. And we'll talk about the first kind of large application at the next earnings call.

David Williams (Analyst)

Great. Thanks so much for the good color there. And I guess maybe secondly, on the ARLIS contract, I noticed in the press release, it seemed like there were a few different figures there. And just hoping you could help me understand exactly what those meant. I saw $5.7 and then $12 and even a $40. So just help me understand what each one of those figures represent, please.

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

Yep. No, I'm happy to give you the color on that. First, even before diving into this, I think one of the most important things is we've opened up another branch of the government to be an IonQ customer. And, you know, like our existing customers, we hope that this is not a one and done, but a multiyear relationship that continues into the future. So, you know, we're excited to have ARLIS and the intelligence community as a customer, and we look forward to many years working with them. As to this particular contract, in fiscal 2023 and 2024, Congress so far has funded this project for $40 million. And so we have won the first phase of the contract. It's a multiphase contract for $5.7 million.

The remaining $40 million is expected to largely go to the construction of the hardware. And we expect by the end of this year to win the next phase of this, of an additional $12 million. So in fiscal 2024, we expect the ARLIS contract to contribute roughly $17.5 million towards our bookings goal for the year. And the rest, the remaining of it, will show up in 2025.

David Williams (Analyst)

Okay, perfect. Great. Thanks for the help there. And then maybe just lastly, you've made some really tremendous progress here over the last several quarters and lots of moving pieces here. But I guess if you were going to kind of boil down your progress and where you are today relative to where you were maybe 12 months ago, how do you think about that progress? And where are we on the pathway to real quantum from where you sit today? Maybe not just for IonQ, but just broadly, how do you think about it? Thank you.

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

Well, I think in lots of companies, and not just IonQ, there's been lots of interesting progress, you know, across lots of different modalities. We do continue to believe. We look at many of the other companies and modalities and technologies. We think that many of them still have a number of, you know, kind of, technical things to overcome before kind of getting to a place of great success. We do think, as you know, as we always look, that we think that IonQ is in good position for that. And, you know, we're going to be getting to a new phase of the business, which is generating revenue from applications rather than generating hardware sales.

And that's kind of the next exciting phase that we're about to start to invest in and hopefully see a return on. So it's just I think it's that part where everyone's been waiting, to be honest, which is when do we start to transition from kind of these early sales to something which is much more significant? I think on the other side, too, you know, if you look at our, what we said we were going to do in terms of both technical and financial from the IPO, we're hitting out of the park once again. We continue to beat even our original estimates. So we're starting to build quite a significant track record.

We're on our way to, you know, breaking through, I think, a mental barrier, which would be the $100 million mark in sales. Had we not gone public via SPAC, we would be thinking about going public with those kinds of sales, just as, you know, through a more normal IPO process. So I think that's a significant milestone for the company as well.

Kevin Garrigan (Analyst)

Thanks very much for the insight. Certainly appreciate it.

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

Always a pleasure.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. The next question we have comes from Quinn Bolton of Needham & Company. Please go ahead.

Quinn Bolton (Analyst)

Hey, guys, let me add my congratulations on the financial and technical milestones, especially hitting that 99.9% qubit gate fidelity. I wanted to start just maybe, you talked about the updated roadmap. I think you published that back in late June. You know, kind of what are the key milestones now on the updated technology roadmap? Are you still targeting Tempo for delivery in 2025? Is that still expected to be based on barium qubits? Just, yeah, what are the highlights of the updated technical roadmap?

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

Yeah, Dean, you want to take?

Dean Kassmann (SVP of Engineering and Technology)

So right now, our technical roadmap remains the same. We're still targeting AQ 64 in Tempo. It's still planning, we're looking at barium as the qubit species. So all of those pieces are there, right? So what we're starting to unveil is a little bit more detail about some of the component benchmarks and other things that are going to kind of enable those AQ benchmarks and numbers that we've talked about in terms of our native two-qubit gate fidelities, our qubit counts, et cetera. But right now, our roadmap remains strong and our progress remains strong.

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

And you've seen, you know, not only in this particular announcement today, we have gotten to 99.9% in barium, right? So that's significant. The other thing is you've seen, I believe, some images of 64 ions loaded in a system as well. So these are all small milestones or, you know, along the way to getting to Tempo. And so we're just kind of showing the progress along the way. Yeah, but the answer is, yes, we're on track for delivering in 25, you know, the first manufactured systems for Tempo.

Quinn Bolton (Analyst)

Perfect. Then, on the error correction announcement from this week, I guess, you know, can you give us some sense, you know, what, what percent of gates in a typical circuit, and there's probably no typical circuit, but, you know, how, how frequently used are Clifford gates? Are those 10% of the gates, 50% of the gates? And can you take the techniques to improve, you know, or to perform error correction on Clifford gates, can you use similar techniques on other commonly used gates in quantum circuits?

Dean Kassmann (SVP of Engineering and Technology)

Great question. And so the Clifford gates are a class of gates that we use here, a lot of other companies use as well, and so they're highly applicable to many different applications. You know, a lot of the variational circuits, chemistry circuits, are comprised of large subblocks of Clifford gates. And so these kind of, you know, noise reduction techniques allow us to be able to target really the key pieces of those circuits to be able to reduce the overall noise and improve the overall results. And so the beauty of this is, as a stepping stone. There's another class of gates that we will have to address noise on, and those are called T gates.

But, our overall philosophy is that any noise reduction helps before the industry reaches full fault tolerance, which is still, we believe, years away, right? There's a lot of other building blocks besides just the error correcting code required for full fault tolerance. And so as we move forward, these are the kind of innovations that accelerate both in hardware and software the capabilities to be able to kind of, as Peter said, supercharge the systems to be able to deliver value sooner.

Quinn Bolton (Analyst)

Perfect. Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you. The next question we have comes from Kevin Garrigan of Westpark Capital. Please go ahead.

Kevin Garrigan (Analyst)

Yeah. Hi, all. Let me echo my congrats on all the progress and congrats on the results. To start, I'm just kind of wondering if you can give a little more color on the ARLIS contract. How many were in the bidding process? Were they all different quantum computing architectures? Anything else you can kind of provide there?

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

I'm not sure we know exactly. I mean, strangely, they didn't send us the responses to the RFP, so, but it is my belief system that there was a number of other companies in different, you know, modalities that competed for it. So, but I don't, to be honest, I don't know what the companies exactly were, and, you know, obviously know nothing about their, of what it is they proposed. So, but it was an open bid, and we won against everyone else.

Kevin Garrigan (Analyst)

... Okay, got it. Got it. And then, Peter, you had mentioned ARLIS opens up another government avenue. I'm just kind of wondering if you can give us some color on, on the commercial and enterprise side of things. Have you started to see an increase in commercial and enterprise customers looking to adopt quantum computing?

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

Yeah, very, very much so. You know, this is, I guess there's a couple of different things. We see, we see two different kind of things customers are interested in. One is quantum networking, and one is quantum computing or application development. It's a little confusing because both of them require quantum computers. One is with the purpose of doing networking and communication, and the other one is doing, you know, it has an interest in applications. But both require, quote, "systems." So that part of it can be confusing when, for instance, when we were talking about Forte Enterprise sales, those are largely customers interested in compute, not networking. So the ARLIS is a case where we're building systems, but now for their primary interest is networking.

And so we also see, you know, increased interest in the applications and the compute space as well. And as I mentioned, we'll talk about the first of those coming up at the next earnings call.

Kevin Garrigan (Analyst)

Okay, perfect. I appreciate the color. Thank you.

Operator (participant)

Thank you, sir. The next question we have comes from Joe Moore of Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.

Joseph Moore (Analyst)

Great. Thank you. Yeah, along the same lines, I mean, you've, you've gotten so many federal opportunities between the Air Force, the Navy, now ARLIS. Can you kind of talk about if there's a common thread, why you keep winning those opportunities? And, you know, you said it's a competitive bidding process. What are the criteria you think that's getting you selected ahead of other quantum opportunities?

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

Ooh, boy, that's a complex question. I do think that there's a number of things. We have, you know, I think a good product and the fact that, you know, the error rates are the best in the industry. Kind of in general, you know, ion trapping is the early winner here. So that certainly helps compared to some of the other, you know, modalities out there. But then even within the ion traps, you know, I think, you know, we're winning largely 'cause we've got a good sales force and a good sales plan. And so, you know, from what I can see from all the published data is that IONQ is winning on the sales front.

You know, that's, it's got to be a mixture of Rima and her sales team and the products that we have. So I think, you know, customers in the know are liking what we're doing.

Dean Kassmann (SVP of Engineering and Technology)

I can speak a little bit. You know, the success criteria that the ARLIS customer was looking for in the competitive process involved technical capability in terms of the system. That included the ability to optically connect systems across a distance. Our investment in our photonic networking and capabilities and the experimental results and things that we've achieved to date were a feather in our cap. They were also looking for a proven track record in delivering and providing systems to customers. We have that track record. So when we were scored at the end of the day, the customer basically scored us high in many of the technical and kind of programmatic requirements that they were looking for in terms of what they were shooting for.

And so, it goes to speak to the track record that we've been building and investing in, both on the technology side as well as on the company side.

Joseph Moore (Analyst)

Great. Thank you very much.

Operator (participant)

Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, just a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star and then one now. At this stage, there seems to be no further questions. I will now turn the conference call back to Peter Chapman for closing remarks. Please go ahead.

Peter Chapman (President and CEO)

I want to thank everyone for joining us today and for your support and for all the great questions. Finally, I want to thank the entire IonQ team for their continued diligent work that contributed to such a meaningful quarter for us, both technically and commercially, and that continues to fuel everything that we look forward to in the future. So thanks again, everyone, for joining, and we look forward to talking to you at the next earnings call.

Operator (participant)

Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, that then concludes today's conference.