Palantir Beats Big, but Stock Falls as High Expectations Bite
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Palantir Beats Big, but Stock Falls as High Expectations Bite
An excellent earnings report from Palantir Technologies wasn’t enough to lift the software company’s own stock. The exchange-traded fund slipped 0.2% on the day even as the and surged toward record highs. “We are seeing the death of legacy software,” Shyam Sankar, Palantir’s chief technology officer, told investors.
All three major US stock indexes were up in late-morning trading Tuesday, as oil prices slid despite
Stocks were back near their highest levels on record after Wall Street turned its attention away from Iran and back to earnings season. The Dow rose 305 points, or 0.6%. The S&P 500 was up 0.7%. The Nasdaq was up 0.
17 The number of times Palantir executives used the word “slop” in last night’s earnings call. They used it both to slam unspecified rivals for offering artificial-intelligence “slop” and to describe their own AI platform, AIP, as a “no-slop zone:” “As inference gets cheaper, the number of tasks that you can economically assign to AI grows exponentially.
The U.S. Army is pushing defense contractors to open up weapons’ software to new tools, including AI.
Palantir Technologies reported record quarterly revenue and profit after yesterday’s close, but its shares fell more than 1% premarket. “The market has priced Palantir for perfection leaving little to no room for margin of error,” analysts at Benchmark Equity Research wrote Tuesday. Palantir has been dogged by its association with the software sector, which has been beset by worries that new AI tools will displace established products.
8.30am: Oil prices ease, as Hegseth plays down Strait fighting Crude oil futures have eased further, as US defence officials struck a cautious tone on the Strait of Hormuz, saying Iranian actions remain below the threshold for a wider conflict, despite continued harassment of shipping. In...
Stocks were set to edge higher on Tuesday as investors looked past rising tensions in the Middle East and took the opportunity to buy the dip in equities following another batch of solid earnings reports. S&P 500 futures added 0.3% and contracts tied to the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 gained 0.5%. The three major indexes all dropped on Monday after the United Arab Emirates said Iran was attacking it with missiles, sparking fears that the Middle East conflict could escalate after weeks of relative calm.
Palantir's first quarter was nothing short of astounding. But does it live up to its sky-high valuation?
Oil prices fell as wary markets monitored a fragile US-Iran ceasefire in the wait for the latest rush of earnings.
Major gauges traded close to flat as investors adjusted to news that ships in the Strait of Hormuz had been struck with missiles.
Joining me on today's call are Alexander C. Karp, chief executive officer; Shyam Sankar, chief technology officer; David A. Glazer, chief financial officer; and Ryan Taylor, chief revenue officer and chief legal. Ryan Taylor: The last three months have been some of the most exciting in the history of Palantir Technologies Inc. as we have watched the whole world begin to see the incredible promise of operational AI as well as the risks and perils of being beholden to models alone.
Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ:PLTR) reported first-quarter 2026 results that executives said reflected accelerating demand for the company’s Artificial Intelligence Platform (AIP), highlighting record growth rates, expanding profitability metrics, and raised full-year guidance. Q1 growth accelerate
Palantir (PLTR) beat first quarter estimates, posting adjusted earnings of $0.33 per share (vs. expectations of $0.28) and revenue of $1.63 billion (vs. expectations of $1.54 billion). Futurum chief market strategist Shay Boloor joins Yahoo Finance to discuss the results.
Palantir reported Q1 earnings and revenue that beat estimates amid strength in its U.S. government business.
↗️ Paramount Skydance (PSKY): Shares were up about 1% in postmarket trading after the company recorded higher quarterly revenue and said it continues to see growth in the streaming business as it prepares to finalize its acquisition of Warner Bros.
Palantir Technologies (PLTR) late Monday raised its 2026 revenue outlook following first-quarter res
The U.S. military used the company’s software in the Iran war and Venezuela raid, and the private-sector business has grown quickly.
The data analytics company now expects $7.65 billion to $7.66 billion in full-year revenue, up from its February forecast
Earnings season is in full swing, and these companies will provide clear insight into the future of AI.
HSBC Cuts Palantir Technologies as Explosive AI Competition Threatens Growth Story
Palantir Technologies (PLTR) is up over 5x in the last two years. It built its foundation on government contracts - defense, intelligence, and federal agencies - and that business is still growing fast. But the new growth vector is enterprise. Companies are moving from AI pilots to production deployment, and Palantir's AIP platform is becoming the infrastructure layer for that shift - autonomous workflows, real decisions, and running at scale.
Palantir has gotten off to a difficult start to the year.
Options show strong upside positioning ahead
Wall Street heads into the first full week of May with a familiar mix of anticipation and nerves. The spotlight is firmly on the April jobs report, a wave of big-name earnings, and a steady drumbeat of Federal Reserve commentary that could shape expectations for interest rates going into...
AI operator and military contractor Palantir Technologies (PLTR) is set to report first quarter earnings results after the bell on Monday. Morning Brief Host Julie Hyman Barron's Investor Circle Newsletter editor Josh Schafer look at Wall Street's expectations for the AI company, while also examining Palantir's release of a new chore coat.
Analysts project the company will report 28 cents in first-quarter adjusted EPS, more than double a year ago.