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Quantum Computing: The Key to Unlocking AI’s Full Potential?

Editor’s note: “Quantum Computing: the Key to Unlocking AI’s Full Potential?” was previously published in July 2024 with the title, “How Quantum Computing Is Already Changing the World.” It has since been updated to include the most relevant information available.

When it comes to long-term investing, there are many ways to find success. For example, the great Warren Buffett likes to buy good businesses with wide competitive moats. Famed investor Benjamin Graham believed in backing undervalued stocks. Other folks like to invest in stable dividend-payers. 

Personally, I work to uncover the next big thing emerging from the tech industry. 

By zooming out to take in the bigger picture, I can identify the technological megatrends that are sure to reshape the world over the next decade. From there, I can home in on the stocks on the cutting edge of those megatrends.

Specifically, I like to do this during times of heightened market volatility – because that is often when you’ll find the best deals on promising stocks. 

I did this in 2015, when many were panicking about plunging oil prices and a global economic slowdown. That same year, I recommended investors buy the dip in an up-and-coming chipmaker called Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). A few years later, AMD stock had soared more than 8,000%. 

I was also able to do this in 2018, when the market was crashing due to the Fed’s aggressive rate hikes. In the midst of that crash, I recommended investors buy the dip in tech stocks like The Trade Desk (TTD), Roku (ROKU), and Tesla (TSLA). All three went on to soar around 1,000% over the next two years. 

March 2020 offered a similar opportunity. While the market was roiling from COVID-19 shutting down the global economy, I was pounding the table on stocks like ZScaler (ZS) and Snap (SNAP). The two popped more than 500% over the next year. 

In other words, looking past market volatility to discover the next batch of big tech winners is sort of “my thing.

And as it happens, I think I may have just found that next batch of winners: quantum computing stocks.

What Is Quantum Computing?

Let me start my discussion of quantum computing by saying that the underlying physics of this technological breakthrough – quantum mechanics – is a highly complex topic. It would likely require over 500 pages to fully understand.

But, alas, here’s my best job at making a Cliff’s Notes version in 500 words instead.

For centuries, scientists have developed, tested, and validated the laws of the physical world, known as classical mechanics. These scientifically explain how and why things work, where they come from, so on and so forth.

But in 1897, J.J. Thomson discovered the electron. And he unveiled a new, subatomic world of super-small things that didn’t obey the laws of classical mechanics… at all. Instead, they obeyed their own set of rules, which have since become known as quantum mechanics.

The rules of quantum mechanics differ from that of classical mechanics in two very weird, almost-magical ways.

First, in classical mechanics, objects are in one place at one time. You are either at the store or at home, not both.

But in quantum mechanics, subatomic particles can theoretically exist in multiple places at once before they’re observed. A single subatomic particle can exist in point A and point B at the same time until we observe it. And at that point, it only exists at either point A or point B.

So, the true “location” of a subatomic particle is some combination of all its possible positions.

This is called quantum superposition.

An image comparing classical and quantum positioning; two boxes with two dots, showing two different positions; one box with two dots showing multiple positions

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