Miami, May 8, 2026, 16:09 EDT
- Palantir hiked its 2026 revenue forecast following an 85% jump in first-quarter sales, driven by strong U.S. government and commercial demand.
- Shares stabilized Friday following a drop after earnings, with investors still eyeing valuation issues.
- Investors want to see if defense AI projects and enterprise AI rollouts can continue expanding, all without putting pressure on margins.
Palantir Technologies stock barely budged late Friday, capping a turbulent week. Investors are still trying to square the company’s strongest quarterly growth numbers with lingering questions about whether the AI rally is baked into the share price. At $137.46, the stock edged up for the day, pushing Palantir’s market cap past $350 billion.
Why does the debate matter? Palantir stands out as a public company showing whether operational AI—tools that drive decision-making for business and government, not just text bots—can actually turn into lasting profit. On Monday, Palantir bumped up its full-year revenue outlook after posting a first-quarter sales increase ahead of what analysts had penciled in.
Palantir posted a sharp 85% jump in revenue for the quarter ended March 31, totaling $1.633 billion. Net income attributable to common stockholders was up too, hitting $870.5 million, or 34 cents a diluted share, compared with $214.0 million a year back. U.S. revenue more than doubled, coming in at $1.282 billion.
The company’s new outlook for 2026 revenue ticks up to a range of $7.650 billion to $7.662 billion, lifting its previous estimate of $7.18 billion to $7.20 billion. For the second quarter, management is guiding for revenue between $1.797 billion and $1.801 billion.
CEO Alex Karp linked the numbers directly to U.S. demand. “Momentum surged as we grew 85% last quarter,” he said in the earnings release. Karp also pointed to “confidence in an accelerating U.S. market” as the reason for bumping up guidance. SEC
Government contracts still make up the backbone. Palantir’s U.S. government business pulled in $687 million, up 84%, and its U.S. commercial side booked $595 million, a 133% spike. Reuters has reported that the company’s Maven AI platform—used for battlefield data analysis and target identification—is on track to be designated a Pentagon program of record, potentially cementing longer-term military adoption.
Japanese outlets took a military tack on the quarter, with Business+IT pointing to rising U.S. Defense Department demand and AI analysis projects as drivers. Nikkei, in its excerpt, flagged Palantir’s net profit for January-March—up fourfold—and mentioned U.S. deployment of AI analysis in Iran-linked missions.
Commercial business pushed the report higher. Palantir locked in 206 contracts worth at least $1 million each last quarter. Of those, 47 topped $10 million. Total contract value jumped 61% to $2.41 billion. That figure reflects the full potential value of signed or awarded agreements—but Palantir notes many contracts could be cut short or scaled back.
The company says its Artificial Intelligence Platform, or AIP, embeds AI models directly into tightly managed business processes. Dion Hinchcliffe, an analyst with Futurum, pointed out that this quarter’s results highlight a shift by companies away from simple AI copilots and toward “governed systems of action”—essentially, automated, audit-ready workflows with built-in cost controls. Right now, he notes, the big unknown is whether Palantir’s delivery can keep up with the level of demand it’s projecting. Futurum
That positions Palantir apart from the basic chatbot crowd. According to Hinchcliffe, Palantir is really going head-to-head with enterprise players like Microsoft, ServiceNow, and Salesforce—each aiming to control the layer where AI agents actually enforce internal policy and execute tasks for businesses.
Executives hammered the message again during the earnings call. Palantir CTO Shyam Sankar emphasized the push for “enterprise autonomy, not on dazzling demos,” repeating the phrase “no slop zone” — Palantir’s shorthand for AI outputs that are traceable, auditable, and under control. Investing
The quarterly numbers didn’t end the debate over Palantir shares. The stock dropped over 7% the day after earnings, and on Friday, Motley Fool’s Stefon Walters argued the company’s valuation has it “priced for perfection”—a setup where even solid performance isn’t enough for investors. The Motley Fool
Costs will bear watching. Chief Financial Officer David Glazer said expenses are set to climb in 2026, with Palantir pushing ahead on product development and hiring technical staff. That’s fine as long as revenue in critical U.S. markets keeps doubling. The equation changes if government contracts lose momentum, commercial rollouts encounter delays, or political scrutiny around defense AI ramps up.