Palantir Technologies Inc. has lost more than a quarter of its market value since October, as the poster child for enterprise AI adoption confronts a market that is no longer willing to pay any price for growth.
The disconnect between Palantir's accelerating fundamentals and its collapsing stock price defines one of the most polarizing trades in the software sector. Revenue grew 85 percent year over year to $1.63 billion in the first quarter, U.S. commercial revenue jumped 133 percent, and management raised full-year guidance by 10 points to 71 percent growth. Yet the stock trades at $128.47, down from $207.52 in February and below its 200-day moving average of $160.42.
"The business has never been stronger, but the multiple has never been more contested," Alex Karp, Palantir's chief executive officer, said on the Q1 earnings call. "Our Rule of 40 score has soared to 145 percent — a feat matched only by fellow AI infrastructure companies like Nvidia and Micron."
The valuation math is brutal. Palantir carries a trailing price-to-earnings ratio of 142 times and a forward multiple of 88 times, with a price-to-sales ratio near 59 times. Even after the 29 percent drawdown, the stock prices in years of perfection. Wolfe Research upgraded Palantir to Peer Perform from Underperform this month — calling it the best enterprise AI product-market fit in the market — but issued no price target, a telling lack of conviction from a firm that had been bearish.
The SaaS-pocalypse hits Palantir
The broader software sector is repricing growth at any cost. Palantir's decline mirrors a rotation out of high-multiple SaaS names as rising interest rates and AI monetization skepticism force investors to demand near-term profits rather than promises. The company's net dollar retention of 150 percent and U.S. commercial remaining deal value of $4.92 billion — up 112 percent — provide multi-quarter visibility, but the market is looking past the backlog to the question of sustainability.
Prediction markets reflect the pessimism. Polymarket traders assigned a 97 percent probability of a down day for Palantir in mid-June, with the modal June price target near $126 and just a 5 percent chance of reaching $168. Insider activity adds another layer of concern: directors Karp, Cohen, and Sankar collectively disposed of more than 880,000 shares on May 20 at prices between $132 and $137, though four directors later acquired shares on June 4.
Michael Burry's Scion Asset Management has publicly called Palantir "a sand castle supported only by AI applications narrative," a critique that dominated Reddit's r/stocks in early June. The bear case argues that even 85 percent revenue growth cannot justify a triple-digit earnings multiple in a rising-rate environment.
The bull case still has believers
Not everyone is selling. Argus upgraded Palantir to Buy from Hold in May with a $190 price target, and 24/7 Wall St. rates the stock a Buy with a $162 target, implying 20 percent upside. The bull thesis rests on three pillars: the Golden Dome defense program, which analysts estimate could be worth $185 billion in total addressable spending; Palantir's AIP platform, which has quadrupled Maven Smart System usage over 12 months; and a free cash flow margin of 57 percent in Q1 that gives management ample capital for reinvestment.
The next scheduled catalyst is Q3 2026 earnings, expected Aug. 3. Until then, the stock's ability to hold above $122.68 — its 52-week low — will determine whether the current level represents a buying opportunity or a pause before further declines.
For investors, the question is whether Palantir's 71 percent revenue growth rate and 0.51 times PEG ratio — low for a company growing this fast — compensate for a forward P/E that still exceeds 87 times. The market is effectively betting that the growth decelerates. If it doesn't, the selloff may prove to have been the entry point. If it does, the multiple compression has further to run.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.