Trump’s AI Secret: 100X Faster Than Nvidia

Wafer-scale technology could deliver 100X the performance while using 90% less energy...

Dear Fellow Investor,

While everyone’s fighting over AI scraps...

Trump just triggered what I believe is the biggest tech disruption since the internet.

I’m George Gilder. I’ve been calling tech revolutions for 40+ years.

When I predicted cell phones would change everything in 1991, people laughed.

When I said streaming video would kill Blockbuster in 1994, Wall Street ignored me.

When I called Amazon’s dominance in 1996, investors shrugged.

Those “crazy” predictions were followed by insane returns:

  • Apple: 249,900% since IPO
  • Netflix: 112,700% from going public
  • Amazon: 216,100% since IPO

Now I see something even BIGGER brewing…

I see the death of big data centers coming. And My research suggests three companies are making it happen: building what I call the “Trillion Dollar Triangle”:

  • Wafer-scale chips 100X faster than current systems
  • 90% energy reduction
  • Technology that makes AI data centers unnecessary

Make no mistake... This could be one of the biggest opportunities I’ve seen in over four decades.

>> Get the three company names before Wall Street catches on <<

To the future,

George Gilder
Editor, Gilder’s Technology Report


 
 
 
 
 
 

This Month's Bonus News

Inside D-Wave's Major Acquisition—What Changes for Investors

By Nathan Reiff. Published: 1/12/2026.

D-Wave Quantum cryogenic quantum computer in a lab enclosure, highlighting the company’s advanced quantum computing systems.

At a Glance

  • D-Wave has put its $836 million in cash reserves to good use, announcing in early 2026 that it would purchase rival Quantum Circuits for $550 million in cash and stock.
  • The purchase comes after months of investor speculation that D-Wave would go on a buying spree.
  • Acquiring Quantum Circuits should help D-Wave to close the technology gap on its gate-model-focused rivals, but commercial viability remains distant.

Popular quantum computing company D-Wave Quantum Inc. (NYSE: QBTS) has taken another step toward cementing its status as a leader in the field with its early-2026 announcement that it plans to acquire privately held rival Quantum Circuits Inc. in a deal worth $550 million. The move is D-Wave's first major acquisition since it reported more than $800 million in cash reserves in its second-quarter 2025 earnings, prompting speculation among investors that the company was preparing for a buying spree.

D-Wave has been demonstrating efforts to expand beyond quantum annealing — an approach that is highly effective for optimization problems but less suited to other tasks. The agreement to acquire Quantum Circuits is the clearest signal yet that D-Wave is serious about broadening into the more common gate-model approach, which would expand the range of potential use cases for its systems.

Why Quantum Circuits?

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With nearly a billion dollars in cash late in 2025, D-Wave likely had a number of acquisition targets to choose from. Quantum Circuits stands out because of its decade-plus experience building gate-model quantum systems.

One disadvantage D-Wave has faced relative to competitors like Rigetti Computing (NASDAQ: RGTI) is that it has lagged in developing gate-model technology. Acquiring Quantum Circuits should help close that gap and give D-Wave both gate-model and annealing systems — the latter of which are already commercially available.

Quantum Circuits is known for so-called dual-rail technology with built-in error detection. That approach can produce higher-quality qubits while reducing some of the physical resources required in manufacturing. D-Wave expects to launch a dual-rail quantum system commercially sometime in 2026.

Financial Impacts on D-Wave

The acquisition could help D-Wave leapfrog parts of the quantum competition by enabling it to bring industry-leading gate-model systems to market alongside its annealing-based systems. The $550 million purchase price — $300 million in common stock and $250 million in cash — may prove a modest price for that strategic benefit.

D-Wave ended the third quarter of 2025 with $836 million in cash and equivalents, up significantly year over year and slightly higher sequentially.

Maintaining a strong cash buffer will be important going forward, given the company's very small revenue to date. D-Wave reported just $3.7 million in revenue for the third quarter — a doubling year over year but still modest compared with some rivals — while quarterly net losses were nearly $141 million.

Is It Time to Buy D-Wave?

D-Wave shares received a modest bump following the Jan. 7 announcement, briefly trading near $32 per share before giving back those gains by the end of the week. Investors remain cautious.

When the acquisition closes (expected in January 2026), D-Wave will gain access to powerful technology, but that won't immediately translate into new products or broad commercial viability for either gate-model or annealing systems. In that sense, the deal is the latest in a string of promising developments over the past year that have yet to materially improve the company's revenue or reduce its losses.

Many analysts still believe widespread commercialization of quantum technology is several years away. D-Wave may have an advantage in that race, but investors will need to wait until a company demonstrates clear, broad commercial adoption.

Accordingly, analyst optimism surrounding QBTS shares — and Wall Street's expectation that the stock might climb roughly 20% to nearly $34 per share — comes with a caveat: D-Wave remains a speculative investment. Some investors may increasingly view it as a leading choice among quantum firms, but significant risks remain until quantum technology proves widely useful to a broader set of customers.


 
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