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Q4 Earnings Highlights: IonQ (NYSE:IONQ) Vs The Rest Of The Hardware & Infrastructure Stocks

As the Q4 earnings season wraps, let’s dig into this quarter’s best and worst performers in the hardware & infrastructure industry, including IonQ (NYSE:IONQ) and its peers.

The Hardware & Infrastructure sector will be buoyed by demand related to AI adoption, cloud computing expansion, and the need for more efficient data storage and processing solutions. Companies with tech offerings such as servers, switches, and storage solutions are well-positioned in our new hybrid working and IT world. On the other hand, headwinds include ongoing supply chain disruptions, rising component costs, and intensifying competition from cloud-native and hyperscale providers reducing reliance on traditional hardware. Additionally, regulatory scrutiny over data sovereignty, cybersecurity standards, and environmental sustainability in hardware manufacturing could increase compliance costs.

The 10 hardware & infrastructure stocks we track reported a slower Q4. As a group, revenues beat analysts’ consensus estimates by 1.1% while next quarter’s revenue guidance was in line.

Amidst this news, share prices of the companies have had a rough stretch. On average, they are down 32.2% since the latest earnings results.

Founded by quantum physics pioneers from the University of Maryland and Duke University in 2015, IonQ (NYSE:IONQ) develops quantum computers that process information using trapped ions to solve complex computational problems beyond the capabilities of traditional computers.

IonQ reported revenues of $11.71 million, up 91.8% year on year. This print exceeded analysts’ expectations by 15.9%. Despite the top-line beat, it was still a slower quarter for the company with a significant miss of analysts’ EPS estimates.

IonQ Total Revenue
IonQ Total Revenue

IonQ achieved the biggest analyst estimates beat and fastest revenue growth of the whole group. Still, the market seems discontent with the results. The stock is down 37.6% since reporting and currently trades at $22.10.

Is now the time to buy IonQ? Access our full analysis of the earnings results here, it’s free.

Founded in 2009 as a pioneer in enterprise all-flash storage technology, Pure Storage (NYSE:PSTG) provides all-flash data storage hardware and software that helps organizations manage their data more efficiently across on-premises and cloud environments.

Pure Storage reported revenues of $879.8 million, up 11.4% year on year, outperforming analysts’ expectations by 1.2%. The business had a satisfactory quarter with an impressive beat of analysts’ EPS estimates but billings in line with analysts’ estimates.