Palantir Technologies (PLTR) has had a rough start to 2026. The stock is down about 27% year-to-date, trading near $128 after peaking close to $215 in late November 2025.
Palantir Technologies Inc., PLTR
Most of that decline happened in January and February, tracking a broader tech sell-off that began in late 2025. Since then, the stock has been stuck in a $120–$145 range, finding buyers in the low $120s and running into sellers in the mid-$140s.
The 200-day moving average sits at $160 and is sloping downward — a bearish signal that technical traders haven’t ignored.
But zoom out from the chart and the picture looks very different.
Q1 2026 Numbers
Palantir posted its fastest revenue growth since going public in Q1. Revenue hit $1.63 billion, up 85% year-over-year. U.S. revenue doubled, growing 104% to $1.28 billion.
Commercial revenue surged 133% to $595 million. U.S. government revenue climbed 84% to $687 million, accelerating from 66% growth the previous quarter.
GAAP net income reached $871 million — a 53% net margin. Adjusted free cash flow hit $925 million on a 57% margin. The company’s Rule of 40 score came in at 145%.
Management raised full-year 2026 revenue guidance to $7.65–$7.66 billion, implying 71% growth — 10 percentage points above what they guided just one quarter earlier. U.S. commercial revenue is expected to grow at least 120% for the full year.
The announcement that got attention at AIPCon 10 on June 4 was Palantir’s new partnership with Google Cloud. Foundry is now available on Google Cloud Marketplace, with two-way data federation between BigQuery and Foundry, and deeper connectivity between Gemini and Palantir AIP.
This matters because it completes the picture. Palantir Foundry is now available on AWS, Azure, Google Cloud, and Oracle Cloud Infrastructure — every major hyperscaler.
Enterprises can now plug Palantir into their existing cloud setup without a rip-and-replace. That’s a meaningful reduction in the friction of adoption.
AIPCon 10 also brought other news: Palantir’s first disclosed commercial customer in Mexico through insurer GNP, an enterprise AI platform deal with law firm Kirkland & Ellis for private equity use cases, and expanded construction AI work with McCarthy Building Companies.
Wall Street is largely staying positive. UBS analyst Karl Keirstead kept a Buy rating with a $200 price target — about 56% upside from current levels — after attending AIPCon and meeting with management. He said Palantir offers more than LLMs, helping customers use their own data to make faster decisions.
Bank of America’s Mariana Perez Mora is even more optimistic, maintaining a Buy with a $255 target. She pointed to Palantir’s ontology platform and growing interest in Apollo, its software deployment and cyber response tool.
Not everyone is fully on board. Wolfe Research’s Alex Zukin upgraded PLTR from Sell to Hold, acknowledging Palantir’s strong position in enterprise AI — but cautioning that much of the growth story may already be priced in.
The overall Wall Street consensus is Moderate Buy, based on 13 Buys, 6 Holds, and 2 Sells. The average price target of $185.35 implies about 44% upside from current levels.
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