SEC Rule S7-2026-15 would let public companies hide bad numbers for six months at a time. Insiders dump their shares before disclosure, retail buys the bag. Comment is open until early July.
@XDebates_X@SquawkStreet@Ripple@bgarlinghouse He’s only solving for himself. He created a great business model for himself and again he can do whatever he wants he doesn’t owe anybody anything and if you wanna to create something that benefits the ecosystem everybody’s free to
@ZacharyTstewy@SquawkStreet@Ripple@bgarlinghouse And you can do that too, he doesn’t owe the community or the other holders anything and neither do you everyone is free to build what they want with any decentralized ecosystem
@SquawkStreet@Ripple@bgarlinghouse Too soon to tell right now in the beginning, definitely XRP had a better ecosystem as of right now that remains to be seen
@SquawkStreet@Ripple@bgarlinghouse Saylor’s team? he doesn’t own $BTC I have no problem with what Saylor is doing he’s driving up demand it’s up to him how he does it.
$XRP simply had a better ecosystem
$INFQ I'm sharing this clip here to set the record straight. @ChipStockInvest recently covered quantum stocks where they called @infleqtion “a conceptual idea” with “zero revenue”.
This is a fundamental misunderstanding of one of the more important public quantum companies, and potentially damaging because the YouTube channel has 256,000 subscribers who may not know better.
Infleqtion is not some paper concept. It is a real quantum company with 200+ employees, two Boulder campuses, decades of operating history going back to ColdQuanta, an advanced quantum sensing business, active customers, public financials, and a serious neutral atom roadmap.
Infleqtion reported $9.5M in Q1 2026 revenue, up 14% year over year, and guided to at least $40M in 2026 revenue.
Why does reporting accurately matter so much? In quantum, the public already has to sort through hype, technical complexity, SPAC noise, timelines, modalities, sensing vs computing, logical qubits, error correction, defense applications, and commercial readiness. The sector is complicated. Every company is unique and has it's own strengths and weaknesses. It is damaging to a sector when an entire important company is wholesale dismissed.
So when people cover the space, the baseline needs to be research and precision.
We can be bullish or bearish on $INFQ. We can debate valuation. We can question commercialization timelines. We can prefer IonQ, Quantinuum, IBM, Google, QuEra, D-Wave, or another quantum company.
But saying Infleqtion is “not a company yet” or has “zero revenue” is simply wrong.
And it matters because Infleqtion is one of the few quantum names with real revenue today, an existing sensing business, national security exposure, and a legitimate place in the neutral atom race. Two quantum executive orders were signed in the Oval Office this week, and Matt Kinsella, the CEO of Infleqtion, was standing behind President Trump.
This sector is moving fast. Just this week, the White House elevated quantum as a national priority, and QuEra/AWS pushed fault-tolerant quantum timelines into the 2028 conversation.
The information gap in quantum investing is already huge. We need to educate and inform the public in a thoughtful way. I appreciate all the coverage on the quantum space, and the new interest, but I encourage bigger channels like this to really do their research and understand the companies they are talking about. Getting it this wrong is harmful and should be corrected.
At a stock price of $13 per share at a $2.8b market cap, @infleqtion is truthfully one of the most undervalued stocks in the quantum sector. Infleqtion received a direct $100mm investment from the U.S. government, has existing and growing revenue from their quantum sensing business, and has an aggressive path to scaling logical qubits on neutral atom quantum computers. $INFQ remains misunderstood, undervalued, and under-appreciated.
$INFQ $RGTI $QBTS $IONQ $XNDU $QUBT $BBCQ $RAAQ $HQ $IBM $BTQ $LAES $OONEF $QNC $ARQQ
@cmsinvests@grok He can’t but maybe I can help seems like it will test the floor on the ipo which is $150 but it won’t find a floor until it start to consolidate if I had to take that guess my range would be 130-150 consolidation