Planet Labs had a strong quarter on paper. But on Wall Street, it wasn’t enough.
$PL Planet Labs Earnings Recap
Planet Labs delivered a solid beat and raised guidance, which is exactly what growth investors want to see.
• Q1 Revenue: $94M vs $90.1M expected
• EPS: ($0.03) vs ($0.04) expected
• Q2 Revenue Guide: $102M-$107M vs $100.9M expected
• FY27… pic.twitter.com/t7tDufsEdS— Danny Naz (@ThePupOfWallSt) June 4, 2026
The Earth imaging company reported fiscal Q1 revenue of $94.2M and an Ebitda loss of just $1M — well ahead of the $90M and $5.3M loss Wall Street had penciled in. A year ago, the company posted $66.3M in revenue and $1.2M in positive Ebitda.
The stock still dropped 4.3% in premarket trading Friday, hitting $41.66.
That gap between a solid beat and a falling stock tells you something about where expectations have landed. PL has gained about 236% over the past six months and nearly 1,000% over the past 12 months. After a run like that, the bar moves.
The most likely explanation? Profit-taking. After gains that dramatic, some investors are going to use good news as a chance to sell.
Through Thursday, PL was trading at roughly 33 times forward sales. A year ago, that multiple sat at about 4 times. That’s a reflection of just how far and fast the stock has run.
Space stocks broadly have been on fire, partly on expectations surrounding the SpaceX IPO. Musk’s rocket company is reportedly targeting a raise of $75 billion, implying a valuation of around $1.8 trillion. That kind of number tends to pull the whole sector up with it.
Planet’s own rally got a boost in March when it reported a surprise Q4 profit — positive Ebitda of $2.3M from $86.8M in sales — against estimates of a $6M loss and $78M in revenue.
Q1 EPS came in at -$0.03, beating the -$0.04 estimate by a penny.
The Defense & Intelligence segment stood out, with sales growing 68% as geopolitical conditions drive demand for sovereign Earth observation data.
Looking ahead, Planet sees Q2 revenue of $102M–$107M, with adjusted Ebitda of around $2.5M. The consensus had been for $101M in revenue and a small loss. Full-year guidance was set at $425M–$441M, slightly ahead of the $427.9M consensus.
Capital spending in Q2 is expected to run about $24M — a touch higher than analysts had modeled, but not by much.
The company ended the quarter with roughly $731M in cash, and analysts expect only modest cash usage through the rest of 2026.
Needham lifted its price target to $53 from $40 and kept its Buy rating, citing the strong Q1 beat and Q2 guidance that topped consensus by 3.6%.
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