Post-Quantum Cryptography 2023: Market Opportunities After NIST
This is the latest IQT Research report on business opportunities in post-quantum cryptography (PQC). The day when commonly used encryption schemes will be breakable by quantum computers is drawing closer. It may be just three-to-five years away if some of the vendor roadmaps are to be believed. IQT also believes that NIST’s pronouncements on standards in 2022 provide stability to the PQC market. In addition to NIST activity this report analyzes the activities of several other standards organizations and industry groups whose work will be crucial role to the implementation and roll-out of PQC.
Based on the current PQC business environment this report provides ten-year forecasts of PQC software, hardware (chips and HSMs) and services. These forecasts are broken out by key applications sectors such as financial services, cryptocurrencies, automotive, healthcare, 5G/6G, IoT, tape drives, and disaster recovery, as well as police, military and intelligence applications. It also examines the motivation for companies and other organizations to adopt PQC. The forecasts are supplied to purchasers of the report in a separate Excel sheet.
The report contains strategic profiles of more than 30 active commercial participants of the PQC market. forecasting revenues from PQC-related activities and assessing the product/market strategies of important companies and other organizations in the PQC space.
Report Introduction and Summary
E.1 When will the quantum apocalypse arrive?
E.1.1 The Z Date and Y2Q
E.1.2 Hack now, decrypt later
E.2 Post-quantum cryptography after the 2022 NIST pronouncements
E.3 The future of PQC markets and supply chains
E.4 Objective, scope and methodology of this report
E.5 Plan of this report
Chapter One: PQC: Emerging Standards and Regulation
1.1 PQC role in the future of quantum cybersecurity
1.2 NIST’s 2022 announcements and their implications
1.2.1 Key agreements and digital signatures
1.2.2 CRYSTALS-KYBER
1.2.3 CRYSTALs-Dilthium
1.2.4 Falcon
1.2.5 SPHINCS
1.2.6 Fourth round: BIKE, Classic McEliece, HQC and SIKE
1.3 Roadmap for future work to be done by NIST
1.4 Other standards efforts
1.4.1 Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
1.4.2 ANSI Accredited Standards Committee X9
1.5 Policy and regulatory considerations in the US
1.5.1 2022 US National Security Memorandum on “Vulnerable Cryptographic Systems”