Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

IBM Spins Off the First Pure-Play Quantum Chip Foundry

read original get Quantum Computing Starter Kit → more articles
Why This Matters

IBM's establishment of Anderon as the first pure-play quantum chip foundry marks a significant milestone in the quantum computing industry, supported by a substantial U.S. government investment. This development aims to accelerate quantum hardware manufacturing, enhance scalability, and strengthen America's position in quantum technology innovation, ultimately benefiting both industry players and consumers through more advanced and reliable quantum solutions.

Key Takeaways

$2 Billion CHIPS Act Investment in Quantum Bets on IBM’s 300mm Superconducting Silicon

A $2 billion CHIPS quantum package spanning nine companies positions IBM’s 300mm Anderon foundry as the centerpiece of American quantum industrial policy, while spreading smaller bets across competing modalities including trapped ion, photonic, and neutral atom approaches.

What is Covered in this Article

IBM’s creation of Anderon as a pure-play quantum foundry

The 300mm fabrication bet versus 200mm CMOS alternatives

U.S. government quantum industrial policy via CHIPS incentives

Superconducting silicon’s iteration advantage over trapped ion approaches

IBM’s ASIC control architecture enabling scalable fault-tolerant systems

The News: IBM and the U.S. Department of Commerce announced on May 21, 2026, a Letter of Intent to establish Anderon, described as America’s first pure-play quantum chip foundry. The initiative is backed by proposed $1 billion in CHIPS incentives from the US Department of Commerce (DoC) and $1 billion in cash from IBM, along with significant contributions of intellectual property, assets, and workforce. The award is the largest allocation within a broader $2 billion CHIPS quantum package that the Commerce Department is distributing across nine companies — including $375 million for GlobalFoundries, $100 million each for D-Wave Quantum, Rigetti Computing, Infleqtion, Atom Computing, PsiQuantum, and Quantinuum, and $38 million for Diraq. Anderon will be headquartered in Albany, New York, and will operate as a standalone 300mm quantum wafer fabrication facility, initially supporting superconducting qubit and supporting electronics wafers, with plans to expand into other quantum modalities.

“IBM has pioneered quantum computing for decades. Our work in silicon wafer fabrication has been a key to IBM’s success and will be critical to enable a broader quantum technology landscape that will reshape global innovation and economic competitiveness,” said Arvind Krishna, Chairman and CEO of IBM. Krishna compared quantum to where AI chips were a decade ago and said the new business could generate billions of dollars a year in sales with high profit margins by the mid-2030s.

... continue reading