Palantir’s Earnings Test Arrives Amid AI Software Market Downturn
May 4, 2026 - 1:24 pm
After experiencing a 30% year-to-date drop, Palantir's first-quarter 2026 results on Monday offer the company a chance to demonstrate that it doesn't belong in the broader AI software market correction.
Until recently, Palantir stood out among large-cap software stocks as the star performer of the AI cycle, surpassing Salesforce, Microsoft, Oracle, and Adobe. It even crossed the $1 trillion market capitalization mark late last year, with strong commercial revenue growth attributed to its unique AI platform, Foundry.
However, a significant 30% drop in value over four trading sessions changed the narrative. Bloomberg's earnings preview highlighted Palantir's challenge: proving its worth outside the current software sell-off that has impacted multiples across the sector since mid-April.
The Factors Behind the Decline:
A short seller's post suggesting that Anthropic was challenging Palantir's enterprise AI dominance, coupled with a Citi price target cut, accelerated the stock's fall. The analysis indicated that AI software valuations were compressing, and Palantir's forward price-to-sales ratio remained unusually high compared to peers.
Previously, Palantir's argument centered on its AIP (AI Platform) being distinct from competitors due to its deployment-focused approach and integration with government contracts. But the bear case argued that general-purpose foundation models powering AIP were now accessible through cheaper alternatives, leading investors to reevaluate Palantir's position.
The Earnings Report Expectations:
Palantir's Q1 2026 results are crucial for resetting investor sentiment. The consensus forecast predicts:
- Revenue of approximately $1.54 billion, a 74% year-over-year increase.
- Adjusted earnings per share of $0.28, more than doubling the prior-year quarter.
- US commercial revenue of around $772 million, a 94% jump.
- Government revenue projected at approximately $764 million, a 57% rise.
Full-year guidance between $7.18 billion and $7.20 billion will be closely watched; any upward revision could mitigate concerns about multiple compression.