Palantir Technologies reported a blockbuster first quarter in 2026, with revenue jumping 85% to $1.633 billion and US commercial sales surging 133%. The company is sitting on $2.2 billion in cash with zero debt, and it raised its full-year revenue forecast to between $7.65 billion and $7.66 billion. Yet the stock has fallen 19% year-to-date in Europe, trading at €115.68, and is down about 34% from its all-time high in the US. The disconnect between operational momentum and market sentiment reflects a bundle of crosscurrents: platform maturation, competitive encroachment from AI labs, insider selling, and a valuation that leaves little room for error.
At the center of the platform story is a low-profile but significant update. On May 26, Palantir began migrating existing OAuth clients into its Developer Console, a process that has been in the works since January 2026, when the company stopped allowing standalone OAuth client creation. The new migration tool moves those clients into full Developer Console applications equipped with Ontology and Platform SDKs, website hosting, application restrictions, DevOps support, and metrics. Users walk through a simple interface — selecting the client, choosing a storage location and maximum classification, reviewing permissions, and submitting the migration — while existing workflows remain untouched. That continuity is crucial for enterprise customers in regulated environments. Separately, Palantir added the ability to work with global branches directly from the Data Lineage view, surfacing branch-specific details for datasets, ontology entities, and their links.
These refinements may seem technical, but they speak to a broader strategy of deepening the platform’s stickiness. Palantir is betting that features like consolidated developer tooling and branch-aware data management will lock in enterprise adoption as its artificial intelligence platform scales. The net dollar retention rate already hit 150%, up 11 percentage points, and total contract value doubled to $11.8 billion. Morningstar analysts describe Palantir as a rare combination of growth and profitability, but they flag the critical question: can the company sustain that retention once the early wave of AIP adoption crests? The risk is that customers start testing rival AI consultants, potentially compressing margins or lengthening sales cycles.
That threat is becoming more concrete. Anthropic recently acquired Fractional AI, a startup building generative AI applications for corporate clients, and is assembling its own consulting arm. The strategy is a near-exact copy of Palantir’s “forward-deployed engineer” model, where engineers work on-site with customers to adapt and implement software. OpenAI’s DeployCo unit is pursuing the same approach. For Palantir, whose core differentiator has long been its on-the-ground deployment expertise, imitation by well-funded AI labs introduces a new dimension of competition. The question is whether rivals can replicate not just the deployment model but also Palantir’s underlying Ontology layer, which organises data into a unified operating system.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Palantir?
Morningstar is watching this closely. The analysts rate Palantir as fairly valued at current levels, acknowledging the financial strength but wary of the premium baked into the stock. The price-to-earnings multiple sits north of 150, and even the forward P/E is around 100. That leaves shares exposed to any hint of deceleration, whether from competitive pressure or internal execution missteps. The average analyst price target of $183.73 implies about 26% upside from the current US-listed price of $136.60, but the gap between that target and all-time highs of $207.52 highlights how much sentiment has cooled.
CEO Alexander Karp’s continued stock sales are another source of unease. On May 20, 2026, Karp sold 397,744 shares for approximately $54 million, leaving him with a stake valued at over $880 million. According to SEC filings, this was the latest in a string of 37 transactions over the past five years — every single one a sale. While the sales are conducted through pre-arranged trading plans, the unbroken pattern of cashing out does little to reassure investors already questioning whether the valuation can be justified.
Against this backdrop, Palantir’s first-quarter numbers remain formidable. The US government segment grew 84% to $687 million, while US commercial hit $595 million. The company closed 206 deals worth at least $1 million, 72 above $5 million, and 47 above $10 million. GAAP net income came in at $871 million, and adjusted free cash flow reached $925 million. Remaining performance obligations stood at $4.5 billion at the end of March, with roughly 39% expected to convert to revenue in the next twelve months. Guidance for adjusted free cash flow this year ranges from $4.2 billion to $4.4 billion.
For now, Palantir is investing heavily in the software infrastructure that supports its AI platform — the OAuth migration and developer console consolidation are evidence of that. But the market is looking beyond the quarterly beat to the competitive landscape and the CEO’s exit schedule. Platform refinements alone won’t silence the doubters; they need to translate into sustained customer expansion at a pace that justifies the multiple. The May 26 update provides another data point on platform depth, but it does not answer the core question of whether Palantir can fend off the copycats and keep its valuation intact.
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