Fujitsu Ltd and Standard Chartered’s innovation unit SC Ventures have laid out a roadmap for Qubitra Technologies, a London-headquartered joint venture aimed at speeding up commercial use of quantum computing in finance.
The partners said the business, previously incubated as “Project Quanta” announced in September 2025, will now launch under the name Qubitra and operate in the United Kingdom.
Qubitra plans to build high-performance, quantum-enabled applications for financial institutions and a marketplace platform intended to connect quantum software and hardware providers with end users, the companies said.
Early use cases include fraud detection, derivatives pricing and trading in financial markets, according to Fujitsu Chief Technology Officer Vivek Mahajan.
The applications will combine quantum and quantum-inspired computing with machine learning and optimisation techniques, he said.
Chief Executive Vishal Shete said Qubitra’s goal is to “turn quantum innovation into business impact” by pairing proprietary applications with a broader ecosystem.
SC Ventures CEO Alex Manson said the venture will use access to Fujitsu’s quantum software and hardware to explore banking use cases in what he called frontier technologies.
Qubitra said initial implementations are under way with financial institutions, hedge funds and family offices, including Standard Chartered Bank, with the first go-live expected in early 2026.
The marketplace platform will integrate multiple software and hardware technologies and allow users to test and deploy solutions across the “full quantum stack,” the statement said.
It will feature Qubitra’s applications alongside third-party offerings, use a usage-based compensation model and support open-source collaboration.
The platform will include Fujitsu’s Digital Annealer as well as Fujitsu quantum resources. A minimum viable product is due to launch with a pilot group of users in 2026, followed by a full launch, Qubitra said.
The venture’s leadership team is based in the UK, and Qubitra is headquartered in London. They are in talks with external providers.
The announcement underscores how banks are trying to translate quantum computing from research into near-term advantages via “quantum-inspired” optimisation and hybrid approaches that can run on today’s machines.
The main test will be whether Qubitra can show consistent, measurable gains over classical models in areas like fraud and pricing, and do so with governance and explainability that regulated financial institutions require.