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UK Startups and Innovation
14JUN

OQC raises £260m in Europe's biggest quantum round

3 min read
16:35UTC

Oxford Quantum Circuits closed a £260m Series C on 2 June led by Bullhound Capital, with the British Business Bank co-investing beside a macro hedge fund, an oil major and Spanish and Japanese sovereign funds.

TechnologyDeveloping
Key takeaway

British quantum now raises growth capital from commercial investors, with the state co-investing rather than underwriting.

Oxford Quantum Circuits (OQC) raised a £260m ($350m) Series C on Tuesday 2 June, the largest private quantum funding round Europe has recorded. Growth investor Bullhound Capital led. The British Business Bank (BBB), the UK's state development bank, joined the cap table as a co-investor, and chief executive Gerald Mullally called the raise a coming-of-age moment for British quantum. 1

A Series C is a company's third major institutional round, the stage at which a firm scales a proven product rather than proving one. Alongside Oxford backers Magdalen College and Oxford Science Enterprises sit macro hedge fund Rokos Capital Management, Spain's state finance arm COFIDES, Chevron Technology Ventures, and Japan's SBI and UTEC. Rokos and Chevron do not write deep-tech research cheques; their presence reads as commercial capital betting on near-term returns.

Britain put £2bn behind quantum in March 2026 through the ProQure procurement programme, the first country to commit at that scale . The BBB had already cornerstoned Quantum Motion's $160m Series C in May , taking the anchor position other investors follow. OQC is the first British quantum company to raise this size from a predominantly commercial group, with the state present yet not carrying the round.

Fault-tolerant systems, machines that correct their own errors well enough to run long computations, need fabrication capacity, and OQC already operates across the UK, United States, Japan and Spain. DSIT has not said whether the £260m funds British plant and jobs or expansion across those overseas sites, the question that decides what the £2bn quantum commitment actually buys at home.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Quantum computers work differently from ordinary computers. Instead of processing information as 1s and 0s, they use quantum bits (qubits) that can be in multiple states simultaneously, making certain types of calculation far faster. OQC's approach uses a design called the coaxmon, developed at Oxford, which keeps qubits stable by engineering out interference that would otherwise scramble results. The £260m raised this week funds more qubits, better error correction, and the manufacturing capacity to sell access to those systems commercially. Why do investors care? Because industries from drug discovery to supply-chain optimisation to cryptography need calculations that classical computers would take thousands of years to complete. The race is to build a system reliable enough to run those calculations without errors.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three converging forces made this round possible in June 2026 rather than two years earlier.

First, the UK government's £2bn ProQure procurement commitment in March 2026 converted hypothetical future state demand into a contracted revenue pipeline, giving crossover investors (Rokos Capital, Chevron Technology Ventures) a floor on OQC's addressable market.

Second, the British Business Bank's expanded £6.6bn direct-mandate, active from April 2026, put a state co-investor on the cap table without requiring OQC to structure the round as a grant or loan, removing the dilution friction that had historically pushed UK deep-tech founders toward US-dominated syndicates.

Third, OQC already operated commercially in the UK, US, Japan and Spain before this round, meaning the £260m is expansion capital for a revenue-generating business, not pre-revenue research funding.

What could happen next?
  • Opportunity

    UK quantum software companies now have a domestically-accessible hardware provider at commercial scale, reducing dependence on IBM or IonQ cloud access.

    Medium term · Assessed
  • Risk

    If OQC's fabrication investment goes to its existing Spanish or Japanese sites rather than UK facilities, the domestic manufacturing case for the ProQure strategy weakens.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Precedent

    Rokos Capital and Chevron as quantum investors establishes a crossover-capital playbook that other UK quantum companies (Quantum Motion, PsiQuantum UK) can reference when approaching non-specialist investors.

    Medium term · Reported
First Reported In

Update #7 · OQC's £260m sets European quantum record

Oxford Quantum Circuits· 7 Jun 2026
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Different Perspectives
European VC (Atomico, Plural, Highland Europe as PhysicsX / Lumen adjacents)
European VC (Atomico, Plural, Highland Europe as PhysicsX / Lumen adjacents)
European growth funds have backed three of the week's largest UK rounds via follow-on positions and co-investments; the PhysicsX cap table includes Atomico (European-domiciled, Skype-founded) and Siemens (German industrial), both returning investors who view UK physical-AI as a supply-chain multiplier across Continental manufacturing. European LP capital is filling the growth tier UK state vehicles have not yet reached.
UK regulated-industry coalition (Lloyds, BAE Systems, LSEG via Lumen Sovereign)
UK regulated-industry coalition (Lloyds, BAE Systems, LSEG via Lumen Sovereign)
Thirteen of Britain's most heavily regulated companies backed Cosine not as a philanthropic gesture but to acquire a data-compliant AI tool that replaces costly US API alternatives; each partner provides proprietary data in exchange for early access. Their participation signals that regulated incumbents, not venture funds, may be the structural customer base that sustains the UK's sovereign model tier.
US growth investors (General Catalyst, Intrepid Growth Partners)
US growth investors (General Catalyst, Intrepid Growth Partners)
US and allied growth investors followed Temasek into PhysicsX's Series C; General Catalyst also returned in the round after backing Geordie the previous week. The absence of any US-led domestic-capital equivalent is a structural reading: American funds enter at growth stage where returns are clearest, ceding seed and Series A economics to UK vehicles that are themselves contracting.
Temasek (Singapore sovereign fund)
Temasek (Singapore sovereign fund)
Temasek led PhysicsX's $300m Series C, its second major UK deep-tech cheque in six weeks after co-investing in Isomorphic's Series B with the SAIU; its thesis runs through Southeast Asian advanced-manufacturing adjacencies, not bilateral UK policy. Singapore's sovereign capital is now the default lead for British scale-ups above £200m that fall outside the BBB's priority sectors.
UK Government (DSIT / Liz Kendall)
UK Government (DSIT / Liz Kendall)
DSIT published its first sector scorecard on 10 June setting a £8.3bn 2025 baseline, and the Sovereign AI Unit's compute allocation enabled Cosine's Lumen Sovereign launch. The scorecard's own barbell figure, more capital in fewer rounds, exposes the policy gap DSIT has not yet addressed: no instrument currently leads venture rounds in industrial AI simulation sectors.
Spanish state finance (COFIDES, CDTI)
Spanish state finance (COFIDES, CDTI)
Spain's COFIDES and CDTI have co-invested alongside UK deep-tech rounds in prior cycles and track the British Business Bank's direct-investment activity as a benchmark for state-capital deployment in innovation. BBB's two direct co-investments in one week set a pace reference for Iberian equivalents.