Photonic Valued at $2B USD With $275M CAD Final Investment Close

Photonic Inc. has secured a final investment of 275 million CAD, bringing the total raised by the distributed quantum computing company to over 475 million CAD and establishing a 2 billion USD post-money valuation. Led by UK-based Planet First Partners, this funding round unites investors from Canada, Europe, the United States, and the Middle East, signaling strong international confidence in Photonic’s approach to scalable quantum technology. The company is already moving beyond research, serving as a customer within DARPA’s Quantum Benchmarking Initiative (Stage B) and participating in the Canadian Quantum Champions Program. “This financing unites government, strategic partners, and international investors around a shared conviction: that commercial-scale quantum computing is within reach – and that its economic impact will be transformative,” says Don Mattrick, CEO of Photonic Inc.

275M CAD Investment Fuels Photonic’s Quantum Computing Leadership

Photonic Inc. received 275 million CAD in funding; this substantial financial commitment underscores growing international confidence in the future of distributed quantum computing. Led by Planet First Partners, a UK-based sustainable technology growth equity firm, this latest funding round expands Photonic’s investor base to include Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC), Export Development Canada (EDC), Bell Ventures, Firgun Ventures, InBC Investment Corp., and Mubadala Capital, demonstrating broad support from both Canadian and international sources. The initial close of the round, revealed in January, already attracted strategic investments from Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) and TELUS, alongside returning investors British Columbia Investment Management Corporation (BCI) and Microsoft. This capital will accelerate Photonic’s development of fault-tolerant quantum computing, leveraging its unique Entanglement First Architecture; this approach combines silicon-based qubits with native photonic connectivity, designed for seamless scaling across existing global telecom infrastructure.

Microsoft’s continued partnership highlights the potential of Photonic’s architecture. “Distributed architectures will be an important way to scale quantum technology, and Photonic is an important partner in advancing that future,” says Zulfi Alam, Corporate Vice President, Microsoft Quantum, adding that their design allows quantum systems to operate over today’s fiber infrastructure, offering a scalable path toward large-scale systems. Peter Suma, Managing Partner, StrongNorth Fund, Business Development Bank of Canada (BDC), affirms that Photonic “fits that thesis: it is advancing scalable quantum capabilities, working with leading global partners, and building on a strong base of Canadian talent.”

Entanglement First Architecture Enables Scalable Quantum Systems

Photonic Inc.’s 275 million CAD investment round isn’t solely about financial backing; it’s a validation of their architectural approach to overcoming a fundamental hurdle in quantum computing: scalability. Current quantum systems struggle to expand beyond a limited number of qubits due to the complexities of maintaining entanglement, the quantum phenomenon linking particles regardless of distance. Photonic proposes a solution by prioritizing entanglement distribution before qubit manipulation, a departure from traditional methods where entanglement is established after qubits are created and connected. This design leverages silicon-based qubits coupled with native photonic connectivity, allowing quantum information to be transmitted across today’s fiber infrastructure. The company’s strategy directly addresses the challenge of building fault-tolerant quantum computers, machines capable of correcting errors inherent in quantum calculations. By establishing entanglement across a network, Photonic aims to create a distributed quantum system where computational power isn’t limited by the physical constraints of a single processor, contrasting with centralized models requiring increasingly complex and energy-intensive cooling and control systems as qubit counts rise. Beyond theoretical advantages, Photonic is demonstrating early applications of its technology.

We’re pleased to welcome Photonic to Bell Ventures’ portfolio to collaborate with Bell’s team on advancing sovereign, scalable quantum computing capabilities in Canada.

Martin Cossette, Head of Bell Ventures, Bell Ventures
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Ivy Delaney

Ivy Delaney

We've seen the rise of AI over the last few short years with the rise of the LLM and companies such as Open AI with its ChatGPT service. Ivy has been working with Neural Networks, Machine Learning and AI since the mid nineties and talk about the latest exciting developments in the field.

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