Side-by-side comparison of AI visibility scores, market position, and capabilities
Houston oilfield services and energy technology (NASDAQ: BKR) ~$27.8B FY2024 revenue; IET LNG turbomachinery 38% revenue, Baker Hughes + GE Oil & Gas combined, energy transition positioning competing with SLB and Halliburton.
Baker Hughes Company is a Houston, Texas-based energy technology and oilfield services company — publicly traded on the NASDAQ (NASDAQ: BKR) as an S&P 500 Energy component — providing oilfield services and equipment (OFSE — drilling, completions, production, and intervention technologies for upstream oil and gas operations) and industrial and energy technology (IET — turbomachinery, compressors, industrial equipment, and digital solutions for LNG terminals, industrial plants, and new energy applications) through approximately 58,000 employees in 120+ countries. Baker Hughes was formed in 2017 through the combination of Baker Hughes (founded 1987) with GE Oil & Gas — GE selling its oil and gas equipment and services business to Baker Hughes — creating a combined company that trades under NYSE: BKR while GE initially held a majority stake, which GE divested by 2022. In fiscal year 2024, Baker Hughes reported revenues of approximately $27.8 billion with adjusted EBITDA of approximately $4.4 billion, with the Industrial & Energy Technology segment (LNG compressors, gas compression, power generation turbines for industrial applications) generating 38% of revenue at above-average margins as LNG terminal construction and industrial decarbonization drove demand for Baker Hughes's turbomachinery and electrification equipment. CEO Lorenzo Simonelli has executed Baker Hughes's "energy transition" strategy — positioning Baker Hughes's equipment and services for both conventional oil and gas (OFSE — growing with global upstream capital expenditure) and the new energy economy (IET — LNG for energy transition, hydrogen compression, carbon capture equipment, geothermal drilling) to reduce Baker Hughes's correlation to oil price cycles.
Cambridge/Colorado trapped-ion quantum computing (Honeywell majority; $625M+/$5B valuation Jun 2024); Helios Nov 2025 at 98 physical/48 logical qubits with 99.9975% fidelity serving Amgen/BMW/JPMorgan competing with IBM Quantum.
Quantinuum is a Cambridge, UK and Broomfield, Colorado-based integrated quantum computing company — majority owned by Honeywell (NASDAQ: HON) with $625+ million in total funding including a $300 million round led by JPMorgan Chase at a $5 billion valuation in June 2024 — operating the world's most accurate commercial quantum computers using trapped-ion technology combined with quantum software from Cambridge Quantum. In November 2025, Quantinuum launched Helios, its third-generation quantum computer featuring 98 physical qubits and 48 logical error-corrected qubits with 99.9975% single-qubit gate fidelity and 99.921% two-qubit gate fidelity — the highest-accuracy general-purpose commercial quantum computer commercially available. Serving enterprise customers including Amgen (drug discovery), BMW Group (materials simulation), JPMorgan Chase (financial optimization), and SoftBank Corp. (AI acceleration), Quantinuum was formed in November 2021 through the merger of Honeywell Quantum Solutions and Cambridge Quantum Computing. CEO Ilyas Khan.
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