Quantum tech firm EigenQ to go public in $3 billion SPAC deal


Computer network equipment is seen in a server room in Vienna, Austria, October 25, 2018. REUTERS/Heinz-Peter Bader

June 17 (Reuters) - EigenQ will ⁠go public through a merger with blank-check company ⁠Silicon Valley Acquisition in a deal valuing the ‌quantum tech firm at about $3 billion, they said on Wednesday.

EigenQ's core business includes making cybersecurity systems that will protect networks and devices from ​future attacks by powerful quantum computers.

The ⁠process, called post-quantum cryptography, ⁠is designed to replace current encryption methods with algorithms that ⁠remain ‌secure even against quantum computing capabilities, ensuring long-term protection of sensitive data and digital infrastructure.

Global enterprises ⁠are adopting this technology amid concerns that attackers ​may store ‌encrypted data now and unlock it later when quantum ⁠computers become ​strong enough to crack today's protections, a risk known as "harvest now, decrypt later."

The company also focuses on quantum-safe communication networks ⁠and advancing sensing technologies designed for ​defense, industrial, environmental and strategic applications.

"We believe going public will provide the resources, visibility, and strategic flexibility necessary to accelerate ⁠commercialization, expand our technology portfolio," EigenQ CEO Jose R Rosas-Bustos said in a statement.

EigenQ has partnered with global tech companies including HPE and AMD . Its initial commercialization efforts ​are focused on government, defense, and ⁠critical infrastructure markets, where regulatory requirements and security mandates are ​creating immediate demand.

The deal is expected ‌to close in the fourth quarter ​of this year.

(Reporting by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar and Sahal Muhammed)

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