Report · Software & Internet

Palantir Through a Long-Term Owner's Lens

Palantir Technologies Inc.
PLTR · US
Current Price
$133.99
May 18, 2026 close
Baillie Growth Score
61/100
Medium
Intrinsic Value · Three-Tier Range Current price $133.99 · Above the optimistic ceiling · future growth overdrawn

Composite valuation range · conservative $18–$30 / fair $35–$60 / optimistic $75–$110. At $133.99, Above the optimistic ceiling · future growth overdrawn.

Lead

Palantir has shifted from "high growth but chronic losses" to "high growth plus strong cash flow": FY2025 revenue of 4.475 billion (+56%), GAAP net income to shareholders of 1.625 billion, and free cash flow of 2.101 billion; Q1 2026 revenue grew 85%, with U.S. commercial up 133%. Yet at the current 133.99, a 344.5 billion market cap implies a trailing PE of roughly 150.6x, P/FCF of roughly 128x, and SBC-adjusted P/OE of roughly 176x. This is an excellent company priced for near-perfection, worth owning for the long run but not worth acquiring at today's price. The three DCF scenarios land at 18-30 / 35-60 / 75-110, leaving the current price well above even the optimistic range. Rating Watch: a high-quality compounder whose price already prices in a decade of extraordinary success.

Quick ReadPlain-language overview · read this first

Palantir stitches the messy data of enterprises and governments into an executable AI platform, with 2025 revenue up 56%, free cash flow of $2.1 billion, and Q1 U.S. commercial up another 133%. The business has genuinely delivered; the sticking point is price. Rating: Watch.

At $133.99, the stock maps to a 150x trailing P/E, and if the hefty annual stock-based compensation is deducted back as a real cost, the multiple climbs another notch on a conservative basis, with an owner-earnings yield under 1%. A three-tier DCF computes intrinsic value at $18-110 per share, the current price sits far above even the most optimistic tier, book net assets are nearly negligible, and the share price rests entirely on discounting the next decade. This is full-price prepayment for an excellent company, not a cheap buy of one—worth owning for the long run, but not worth buying at today's price.

The biggest risk is being "excellent, but not excellent enough to justify this price." All the market has to do is compress the valuation back to the mature-software range, and a return to $35-60 is 55%-75% downside, with the company paying no dividend and holding no cash cushion. Add the founder's near-half voting control and 33% dilution over four years. Ideal buy is $25-45; wait for the price, do not chase.

Full report

A note on labeling. This report tries to keep facts, assumptions, inferences, and opinions distinct. Anything drawn from financial statements, formal filings, regulatory disclosures, official announcements, or high-quality media is a fact; reasoning that extends from those facts is an inference; valuation-model inputs are assumptions; and the final rating is an opinion. All dollar amounts are in U.S. dollars unless stated otherwise. The current share price reflects the most recent market data available as of May 18, 2026.

Conclusion First

Investment rating: Watch. Is there a margin of safety at the current price: no. Suitable investor type: Better suited to growth investors who understand enterprise AI and data infrastructure, can tolerate high volatility, and are willing to pay a high price for very strong growth expectations; less suitable for classic long-term value investors who treat margin of safety as central and would be building a position at this price. The biggest uncertainty: whether AIP-driven high growth can persist on a ten-year horizon; the political, budgetary, and reputational risks tied to the government business; and the fact that at an extreme valuation, even if operations stay excellent, a contraction in the multiple could swallow long-term returns.

Core judgment. Fact: Palantir has moved from a company defined by high growth and chronic losses to one with high growth, high gross margins, strong cash flow, and ample net cash. FY2025 revenue was 4.475 billion, up 56% year over year; GAAP net income to shareholders was 1.625 billion; operating cash flow was 2.134 billion; free cash flow was about 2.101 billion; and Q1 2026 revenue grew another 85% year over year, with U.S. commercial revenue up 133%. Inference: This shows Palantir is not a story stock; it has entered a genuine phase of delivering profit and cash flow. But the other side of the facts: the current market cap is about 344.5 billion, with a trailing PE of roughly 150.6x. Working from FY2025 and Q1 2026 data, Palantir's TTM free cash flow is about 2.69 billion, putting the current market cap at roughly 128x P/FCF; if stock-based compensation is treated as a real economic cost, owner earnings on a conservative basis come to about 1.96 billion, or roughly 176x. Opinion: This is an increasingly good business, but at the current price it looks more like an excellent company priced for near-perfection than an excellent company at a sufficiently cheap price.

Put in Buffett's terms: Would I want to own this business for the long run? Yes. Would I want to acquire it for the long run at today's price? No. The reason is not that Palantir is weak; it is that the current price all but requires the company to keep growing fast over the next decade, hold extreme margins, and have the market grant it a very generous valuation for years. Miss on any one of those, and returns could fall well short of expectations.

Understanding the Business and Industry

Is this a business I can understand? Conclusion: understandable at the business-model level, but not simple, with complexity above a typical consumer-goods or traditional software company. Business comprehensibility score: 3.5/5.

What the core business is. Fact: At its core, Palantir takes scattered, heterogeneous, permission-complex data, brings it onto a unified platform, and turns it into actionable data models, workflows, and AI applications serving government and enterprise customers. The company's website emphasizes software for "real-time, AI-driven decision-making"; its early and continuing disclosures show that revenue comes from subscription access to Palantir Cloud and On-Premises Software, accompanied by ongoing operations and professional services. Palantir's principal platforms include Gotham, aimed at government security and defense use cases; Foundry, aimed at enterprise operations; and AIP, which connects large models to live business systems.

Who the customers are. Fact: Palantir's customers fall into two broad groups, government and commercial. In 2025, government revenue was 2.402 billion and commercial revenue was 2.073 billion, a more balanced mix than in the early years; in Q1 2026, government revenue was 858 million and commercial revenue was 774 million, still roughly balanced. In its Q1 2026 commercial update, the company disclosed 1,007 total TTM customers, 780 commercial customers, and 615 U.S. commercial customers.

How it charges. Fact: The model is essentially software subscriptions plus operations and professional services. The filings state plainly that the company recognizes revenue by selling subscriptions for access to its cloud and on-premises software and by providing ongoing O&M and professional services. Revenue is typically recognized ratably over the contract term.

Whether revenue is recurring, stable, and predictable. Fact: On one hand, Palantir has a meaningful recurring character. The Q1 2026 update disclosed a net dollar retention rate of 150%, indicating strong expansion among existing customers; U.S. commercial customer count and U.S. commercial remaining deal value both continued to grow. On the other hand, the company explicitly cautions that TCV and RDV assume by default that customers will exercise contract options and not terminate, while most contracts contain termination provisions; government contracts in particular are not an ironclad subscription. Inference: So it is not recurring revenue as stable as Coca-Cola, but it is clearly better than one-off, project-based consulting; it is closer to a hybrid of sticky platform software plus project-based expansion across several large accounts.

What the cost structure looks like. Fact: Palantir's strength is high gross margin. Gross margin was 82% in 2025 and 87% in Q1 2026; cost items mainly include third-party cloud hosting, subcontractors, on-site service staff, and employee compensation. A major source of the company's rising costs in 2025 was the expansion of cloud hosting, subcontractors, and on-site services. Inference: This shows it is not a pure "zero marginal cost" SaaS; it still carries implementation, delivery, and on-site deployment costs. But as productization deepens, its operating leverage continues to come through.

Whether it depends on a few customers, policy, or key people. Fact: No single customer accounted for more than 10% of revenue in 2025, and none did in Q1 2026 either; yet in Q1 2026, Customer I represented 31% of accounts receivable, up from 25% at year-end 2025, showing that settlement cadence and the timing of collections from large accounts still matter. At the same time, the company is deeply and durably tied to the U.S. military, intelligence agencies, federal bodies, and regulated industries, while the three founders retain close to 50% voting control through a Class F / Founder Voting Trust structure. Opinion: Revenue concentration risk is lower than the market tends to assume, but politics, budgets, government procurement, and founder governance control remain important dependencies.

Where the industry stands. Fact: Gartner projects that global AI spending will reach 2.52 trillion in 2026, up 44% year over year; within that, GenAI model spending is expected to grow 80.8%, and total software spending remains above 1.4 trillion. The U.S. Department of Defense's FY25-26 software modernization implementation plan also explicitly prioritizes the software-defined battlefield, data interoperability, and rapid delivery. Inference: Palantir operates not in a declining industry but in one where demand is growing fast and competition is intensifying just as fast.

Who the main competitors are. Fact: Among comparable public peers, the closest include Snowflake, Datadog, and C3.ai, with additional flanking competition from platform giants such as Microsoft, Oracle, AWS, and Google Cloud; in government and defense digitization, it also runs into traditional government IT and consulting contractors and newer defense-tech vendors. Palantir competes in both the government and commercial markets at once. Opinion: If I had to pick a single "strongest comparable," I would choose Snowflake as the closest public-market peer in data platforms and enterprise AI infrastructure; but the comparison is admittedly imperfect, because Palantir layers on workflows, delivery, defense, and security use cases as well.

Industry attractiveness score: 4/5. This is a good industry. But it is also one full of technological substitution, price competition, platform consolidation, and regulatory friction, so it is not an industry where you collect rent passively; it demands continuous investment and innovation.

Moat and Management

Moat strength score: 3.5/5. Management and capital allocation score: 3/5.

Where the moat actually comes from. Brand advantage: moderate. Palantir has a strong brand in defense, intelligence, security, critical infrastructure, and high-complexity data integration, but it is not a mass consumer brand; it is a mission-critical software brand. The enterprise service agreement the U.S. Army signed with Palantir in 2025, with a ceiling of up to 10 billion and a term of up to ten years, shows that its brand and procurement credentials in high-security settings are real.

Switching costs: fairly strong. Fact: Palantir's platform is not a lightweight plug-in; it embeds the data ontology, permissions, processes, and frontline, factory, hospital, and battlefield operations into the customer's organization. Q1 2026 net dollar retention was 150%, and U.S. commercial customers kept expanding. Inference: Once a customer runs critical processes on Foundry, AIP, or Gotham, the cost of moving is not just technical migration; it also includes migrating the permission model, operating procedures, organizational learning, and tactical and operational habits.

Scale advantage: present, but not absolute. Palantir already has enough scale to spread R&D, sales, on-site deployment, and security certification across a larger customer base; 2025 revenue was 4.475 billion, R&D expense was 558 million, and Q1 2026 operating margin reached 46%. But its scale is still far below super-platforms like Microsoft, Oracle, and AWS, so its scale advantage shows up more in specific complex use cases than as industry-wide lowest cost.

Network effects: weak to moderate. Palantir does not have the strong network effects of a payment network or a social network. Its advantage is not "the more users, the more valuable," but "the deeper a customer uses it, the harder it is to replace." More precisely, it is high switching cost plus process embedding, not a classic network effect.

Distribution advantage: average. Its channel is not a traditional distribution system; it is closer to "high-touch sales plus bootcamps plus solution implementation." This helps win customers, but it is not the strong channel moat of a Coca-Cola or an Apple.

Patents, licenses, regulation, and compliance barriers: moderately strong. In government and highly regulated industries, security certifications, a track record of performance, bid qualifications, and confidentiality and compliance capabilities are themselves barriers. The U.S. military continues to expand its adoption of Palantir, and Q1 2026 government revenue grew 76% year over year, both signs that these barriers have real value.

Data advantage: limited but real. Palantir does not exclusively own global raw data, so the "data moat" should not be overstated. Its greater strength is the ability to weave a customer's own data, processes, permissions, and AI models into an executable system. This is a structured-data, ontology, and workflow advantage, not an advantage of "owning the most data."

Corporate culture and operating ability: fairly strong. On the financials, Palantir has over the past three years simultaneously grown revenue, lifted gross margin, raised operating margin, and expanded cash flow sharply, which shows it is genuinely improving at productization, delivery efficiency, and commercialization, not merely telling a story.

Whether the moat is widening, stable, or narrowing. Opinion: I lean toward judging it stable to slightly widening. AIP makes it easier for the company to expand from a data platform into an AI operating system that can directly drive business actions, which raises value per customer and depth of embedding; but that same advantage attracts stronger, better-capitalized rivals such as Microsoft, Oracle, Snowflake, and Datadog, so the moat's expansion is not risk-free.

Whether management can be trusted. Positive facts: The founding team holds a deep stake, has stayed in place for the long run, and has kept direction steady; Alex Karp, Stephen Cohen, and Peter Thiel remain central figures. The 2026 proxy statement shows that the three founders maintain a 49.999999% cap on total voting power through the Founder Voting Agreement and Class F structure; Alex Karp himself holds substantial Class B and Class F stakes and exercisable interests. Negative facts: This structure is not friendly to minority shareholders and is clearly "founder-first" in governance; at the same time, the company has historically leaned heavily on stock-based compensation, with SBC of 778 million in 2021 and still 684 million in 2025. Opinion: Management is long-term oriented, but that does not mean governance is run entirely in the interests of minority shareholders. For long-term investors, this is a governance risk worth discounting for.

Whether capital allocation is rational. Positive facts: The company carries no interest-bearing debt; cash and short-term securities on the balance sheet are ample; there is no problem of being forced into high leverage to fund growth. Negative facts: The buyback record does not look good. In 2025 the company repurchased only 600 thousand shares for 75 million; in January 2026 it bought back 8,452 shares at an average price of about 177.45 and then terminated the buyback program shortly after, while in May 2026 the stock traded around 133.99. Judged as a capital-allocation exam, this answer is not strong. The company has also never paid a dividend and explicitly has no plans to. Opinion: Palantir is not a poor capital allocator, but it is far from a Buffett-grade one. Its best capital allocation is to keep investing in high-return products and its sales engine; its worst is token buybacks when the stock is expensive, paired with heavy long-term use of equity to pay employees.

Financial Quality and Owner Earnings

Conclusion: financial quality has improved markedly and cash flow is real, but historical and ongoing stock-based compensation means accounting profit does not equal fully distributable profit.

Key Financial Metrics

Metric 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 TTM to 2026Q1
Revenue 1.542 billion 1.906 billion 2.225 billion 2.866 billion 4.475 billion 5.224 billion
Gross margin 78% 79% 81% 80% 82% about 84%
Operating margin -27% -8% 5% 11% 32% about 38%
Net income to shareholders -520 million -374 million 210 million 462 million 1.625 billion 2.282 billion
Operating cash flow 334 million 224 million 712 million 1.154 billion 2.134 billion 2.723 billion
Free cash flow 321 million 184 million 697 million 1.141 billion 2.101 billion 2.688 billion
SBC 778 million 565 million 476 million 692 million 684 million 730 million
Diluted weighted-average shares 1.924 billion 2.064 billion 2.298 billion 2.451 billion 2.565 billion 2.571 billion

Table note. 2021 data are from the 2021 annual report; 2022 from the 2022 10-K; 2023 from the 2023 10-K; 2024 and 2025 from the 2025 10-K; TTM is FY2025 + 2026Q1 - 2025Q1, estimated in this report. Free cash flow is defined as operating cash flow minus capital expenditures.

Revenue growth. From 2021 to 2025, revenue grew from 1.542 billion to 4.475 billion, a four-year compound rate of about 30%; and Q1 2026 grew another 85% year over year. At the level of fact, growth is very strong; at the level of inference, Palantir has shifted from slow commercialization to an AIP-driven phase of rapid ramp-up.

Margin trend. Gross margin rose steadily from the high 70s into the 80s, and operating margin climbed from -27% in 2021 to 32% in 2025, reaching 46% in Q1 2026. This is not simply layoffs or short-term cost cutting; it is strong revenue growth combined with the release of operating leverage.

Operating cash flow and free cash flow. In 2025, operating cash flow was 2.134 billion and capital expenditures were 33.88 million, giving free cash flow of about 2.101 billion; TTM to 2026Q1 free cash flow was about 2.688 billion. Capex as a share of revenue is extremely low, which shows this is a business whose growth does not consume much capital expenditure.

Whether profit is real cash profit or accounting profit. Fact: Profit and cash flow now broadly match, and cash flow even exceeds GAAP net income. In 2025, operating cash flow exceeded net income, for reasons that include stock-based compensation, increases in contract liabilities, and other non-cash items. Key reminder: Just because OCF and FCF are high is no reason to ignore SBC. Palantir's SBC was still 684 million in 2025, with another 202 million in Q1 2026 alone. For a software company, SBC is non-cash but is a real, dilutive cost to shareholders. Opinion: Palantir's profit is no longer a pure accounting illusion, but without an economic treatment of SBC, its distributable cash flow will be overstated.

Return on capital. A strict ROIC would require a unified treatment of excess cash, leases, contract liabilities, non-interest-bearing items, and stock-based compensation; without additional modeling, this report does not give a single precise value. But the facts are enough to show the direction of returns is already very good: 2025 operating profit was 1.414 billion, there is no interest-bearing debt on the books, capital expenditure is very light, and margins are rising quickly. For a software platform still growing fast, this already reflects very strong economic characteristics.

Balance sheet and survivability. As of March 31, 2026, the company had cash and cash equivalents of 2.292 billion and short-term marketable securities of 5.735 billion, totaling about 8.026 billion; total liabilities were about 1.643 billion; there is no interest-bearing debt pressure. The company also explicitly disclosed a zero outstanding debt balance in 2025. Opinion: In an economic downturn, Palantir is highly unlikely to run into trouble because of leverage. Its real risk is not bankruptcy but a decline in growth and valuation.

Receivables, payables, contract liabilities, and working capital. Accounts receivable were about 1.042 billion at year-end 2025, rising to 1.406 billion in 2026Q1; over the same period, contract liabilities and customer prepayments also rose noticeably. The company also disclosed that in 2026Q1 a single customer accounted for 31% of accounts receivable. Inference: This shows Palantir's growth brings working-capital swings, but the large volume of prepayments and contract liabilities is also supporting cash flow. For a company driven by large deals and a mix of government and large-enterprise contracts, quarterly cash flow swings should not be extrapolated linearly.

Change in share count. Diluted weighted-average shares rose from 1.924 billion in 2021 to 2.565 billion in 2025, an increase of about 33%; but the year-over-year pace has clearly slowed, with 2026Q1 diluted shares only modestly above 2025Q1. Opinion: Early dilution was very severe; it is improving now, but it cannot yet be called fully resolved.

Owner Earnings Analysis

The conservative basis I use. Traditional Buffett-style owner earnings start from net income, add back non-cash charges, and subtract maintenance capital expenditure and necessary working-capital investment. For a software company like Palantir, maintenance capex is very low, but SBC is very high. So simply adding all SBC back would clearly overstate "real distributable cash flow." This report uses a more conservative economic basis:

Conservative owner earnings = operating cash flow - capital expenditures - recurring SBC.

Why do it this way? Because if a company pays salaries in stock over the long run, old shareholders either accept being diluted or must later buy back shares with cash to offset the dilution; neither is "free." This basis is closer to a long-term owner's perspective than standard financial free cash flow.

Estimated on this basis. 2025: 2.134 billion - 34 million - 684 million is about 1.417 billion. TTM to 2026Q1: 2.723 billion - 35 million - 730 million is about 1.958 billion. Against the current market cap of about 344.48 billion, Palantir trades at roughly 176x conservative owner earnings, an owner-earnings yield of about below 0.6%.

What this means. Fact: On ordinary free cash flow, Palantir's cash flow is very strong; on conservative owner earnings, it is still strong, but not as dramatic as many "FCF darling" charts make it look. Opinion: For a long-term owner, Palantir already has real earning power; but at the current price, what you are buying is not "cheap cash flow" but "an expensive prepayment for ultra-high growth over the next decade."

Intrinsic Value and Margin of Safety

The current market price is about 133.99 per share, with a market cap of about 344.48 billion.

Owner-Earnings Discount Method

Method. I do not mechanically annualize the single quarter of Q1 2026 profit; instead I use a more conservative "normalized owner earnings" as the starting point and give three scenarios. The valuation here is assumption-driven, not fact; its value lies in exposing how demanding the requirements implied by the current price are.

Conservative scenario assumptions. Normalized owner-earnings starting point of 1.7 to 1.8 billion; 15% annual growth for the first five years, 8% for the next five; 10% discount rate; 3% terminal growth. Inferred result: intrinsic value of roughly 18-30 per share. This corresponds to: Palantir remains an excellent business, but growth gradually reverts to the level of a more mature software platform.

Neutral scenario assumptions. Normalized owner-earnings starting point of 1.8 to 2.0 billion; 22% annual growth for the first five years, 12% for the next five; 9% discount rate; 4% terminal growth. Inferred result: intrinsic value of roughly 35-60 per share. This already requires Palantir to sustain growth and margins far above most large software companies for a very long time.

Optimistic scenario assumptions. Normalized owner-earnings starting point of 1.9 to 2.1 billion; 30% annual growth for the first five years, 15% for the next five; 8% to 8.5% discount rate; 4.5% to 5% terminal growth. Inferred result: intrinsic value of roughly 75-110 per share. To support today's price near 134, you usually need an even more aggressive combination: a higher starting point, a longer stretch of ultra-high growth, and a lower discount rate or higher exit multiple.

Relative Valuation Method

The table below picks three comparable public companies to compare current valuations. To be clear: the comparables are not perfect, because Palantir spans data platforms, the AI application layer, government software, and combat and operational workflows all at once; but it is still enough to show that the market has granted Palantir an extreme premium.

Metric PLTR SNOW DDOG
Current market cap 344.5 billion 53.5 billion 75.9 billion
P/S about 66x about 11x about 21x
P/FCF about 128x about 48x about 79x
P/E about 151x not applicable about 533x
P/B about 40x about 28x about 19x
EV/EBITDA about 167x not applicable or not meaningful very high and unstable

Table note. Current market cap and some valuation measures are from market data; revenue, free cash flow, equity, cash, and debt are from each company's latest annual and quarterly reports; enterprise value and multiples are rough estimates on this report's basis, rounded. Because Snowflake is still net loss-making, its EV/EBITDA and P/E have limited reference value; Datadog's EBITDA swings widely because of its small operating-profit base.

Conclusion. Fact: Palantir's growth and profit quality are currently better than those of many comparable high-growth software companies. But it is equally a fact: the valuation premium the market grants it is no longer merely "somewhat high"; it is enormous. Opinion: You cannot call Palantir cheap just because its peers are also expensive; the more reasonable reading is the opposite: Palantir is a high-quality company, but its current pricing already reflects the expectations of one of the very best large software platforms.

Asset and Liquidation Value Method

Fact: As of March 31, 2026, Palantir's cash and cash equivalents were about 2.292 billion and short-term marketable securities about 5.735 billion, totaling about 8.026 billion; total liabilities were about 1.643 billion and total shareholders' equity about 8.450 billion. On about 2.571 billion diluted shares, net liquid financial resources are roughly 2.5 per share and book net assets roughly 3.3 per share. Inference: Palantir's asset value cannot support the current share price; the current price rests almost entirely on discounting a decade or more of high free cash flow, not on existing net asset value.

Margin-of-Safety Judgment

Conservative intrinsic-value range: 18-30. Fair intrinsic-value range: 35-60. Optimistic intrinsic-value range: 75-110. Current price relative to fair value: a significant premium. Required margin of safety: at least 25% to 30%, and I would demand more for a stock with expectations this high. Ideal buy-price range: 25-45. Acceptable hold-price range: 45-70. Clearly overvalued price range: above 100, and especially above 120.

Why I judge it this way. The current 10-year Treasury yield is about 4.59%, while Palantir's free-cash-flow yield against the current market cap is under 1%, and its conservative owner-earnings yield is lower still. When you buy it, you are not buying current cash returns; you are buying the very rare prospect of sustained ultra-high growth over the next decade. That is not unbuyable, but for a framework that is "balanced, long-term owner, margin-of-safety focused," the margin of safety is clearly insufficient.

Risks, the Bear Case, and Comparison with Alternatives

The most important risks.

Competitive risk. Microsoft, Oracle, AWS, Google Cloud, Snowflake, and Datadog are all converging on "data plus AI plus application workflow." Palantir is out in front now, which does not mean it can hold its differentiation forever. Demand in the industry is large, but the rivals are many and strong.

Technological-substitution risk. AIP's success depends on model capability, inference cost, data governance, and application delivery. If base models, agent frameworks, and cloud-platform native capabilities become highly commoditized in the future, Palantir's pricing power could be eroded. Inference: what it most needs to defend is not "whether AI will arrive," but "whether, once AI is widespread, it can still capture enough of the value distribution."

Regulatory and reputational risk. Palantir's work in sensitive areas such as defense, law enforcement, immigration, and healthcare is inherently controversial. Official NHS disclosures in the UK confirm that the Palantir-led consortium won the contract for that program in 2023; subsequently, the UK Parliament and the media continued in 2026 to raise criticism over patient-data access, transparency, and public trust. Even where Palantir is legally compliant, large public-sector programs can be repriced when the political climate shifts.

Contract and budget risk. The ceiling of the U.S. Army enterprise agreement can reach 10 billion with a term of up to ten years, but that is a ceiling and a procurement vehicle, not locked-in revenue; most related contracts may still be affected by budgets, termination-for-convenience clauses, and procurement cadence.

Accounting and measurement risk. Palantir's GAAP profit is real now, but if investors look only at "adjusted profit" or treat SBC as costless, they will overstate intrinsic value per share. For a stock like this, the biggest accounting risk is often not fraud but mistaking dilution for a free lunch.

Overvaluation risk. This may be the biggest risk. Even if the business keeps growing, simply repricing it from 150x PE and 128x P/FCF down to the range of a mature high-growth software stock could still send the share price down sharply. The largest permanent-capital-loss scenario is not necessarily corporate decline; it may be "a good company plus too high a purchase price plus a decade of mediocre returns."

The strongest bear case. The bear's strongest logic is not "Palantir is bad," but: Palantir may genuinely be a good company, but today's price pulls a great deal of a decade's success forward. If revenue growth falls from 50%-plus to 20%-25%, if operating margin reverts to 25%-30%, and if the market is willing to grant only 30-50x owner earnings rather than over 100x, then a buyer today could see ten-year returns in the low single digits, or even negative. I consider this a bear case worth taking seriously, not emotional short-selling.

Which facts would overturn the investment case. If the following facts emerge in the future, I would acknowledge that "Palantir's long-term investment logic is significantly impaired": First, AIP-driven commercial growth clearly stalls, especially if U.S. commercial revenue growth steps down sharply for several consecutive quarters; Second, net retention and customer expansion deteriorate markedly, indicating the depth of product embedding is not as strong as imagined; Third, margin gains come mainly from short-term cost compression rather than productization and scale leverage; Fourth, SBC runs out of control again and brings clear, sustained dilution; Fifth, large government deals are clearly impeded by political, budgetary, or compliance disputes; Sixth, valuation stays high while both growth and margins are revised down at once. All of these warrant ongoing monitoring.

Comparison with the index, the risk-free rate, and other opportunities. For most ordinary investors, buying Palantir today is not clearly better than buying a broad-based index. An index does not require you to judge precisely whether a single company can sustain ultra-high growth for a decade; Palantir's current valuation requires you to get that almost exactly right. Against the roughly 4.59% nominal yield of the 10-year Treasury, Palantir's current cash yield is too low, and investors depend almost entirely on future growth. Opinion: If your goal is "steady long-term compounding," Palantir should not now be one of your top five highest-conviction holdings; if your goal is "to bet on the leader in U.S. enterprise AI infrastructure at a very high valuation," it can stay on your priority watch list.

Investment Checklist and Final Conclusion

Investment Checklist

Check item Conclusion
Can I understand this business Pass
Does it have durable, stable demand Pass
Does it have a lasting moat Pass
Does it have pricing power Uncertain
Can it generate stable free cash flow Pass
Is its return on capital excellent Pass
Is management trustworthy Uncertain
Is capital allocation rational Uncertain
Is the balance sheet sound Pass
Is the valuation below intrinsic value Fail
Is the margin of safety sufficient Fail
Would holding for the long run let me rest easy Pass on the business, fail on the price
Which key facts would make me sell Growth stall, SBC out of control, declining customer stickiness, government or compliance obstruction, valuation still high but fundamentals weakening
Am I only wanting to buy because the price has risen or because of market sentiment Very possibly yes

Final Judgment

[Final rating] Watch

[One-sentence investment thesis] Palantir is very likely a high-quality AI and data infrastructure company entering its delivery phase, but buying at the current price looks more like a highly leveraged prepayment for extreme success over the next decade than the acquisition of a margin of safety.

[Core bull case] First, the business has moved from "telling a story" to "delivering profit and cash flow," with very strong margins, cash flow, and growth in 2025 and 2026Q1. Second, AIP is driving explosive growth in the U.S. commercial business, and customer count, deal value, and retention all support the judgment that the platform is penetrating deeply. Third, deep cultivation of government and defense use cases creates fairly high switching costs and procurement barriers, and large customer relationships such as the U.S. Army are real. Fourth, the balance sheet is very strong, with no interest-bearing debt pressure and high through-cycle survivability. Fifth, the industry direction is correct, and total demand for AI and software modernization is still expanding.

[Core bear case] First, the valuation is extremely high, with almost no margin of safety. Second, SBC is still high, and economic profit is below the surface free cash flow. Third, the governance structure is not friendly to minority shareholders, and founder control is very strong. Fourth, sensitive areas such as government and healthcare carry reputational and regulatory disturbances, and procurement and renewals are not linear. Fifth, if AI-platform capabilities are commoditized or large-vendor consolidation accelerates, Palantir's premium could compress.

[Key assumptions] The conditions that must hold include: AIP can keep scaling the U.S. commercial business; the government business holds its position with no major political headwinds; operating margin can stay high over the long run; SBC does not deteriorate again; and a decade out, the market is still willing to grant it a multiple above an ordinary software stock. If any one of these key premises clearly breaks, the current investment logic weakens significantly.

[Fair buy price] The ideal buy range I give is 25-45 per share, corresponding to "fair value of 35-60 per share" with a margin of safety applied. If you are willing to accept more aggressive growth assumptions, it is still unwise to treat anything above 70 as an attractive value entry. The ranges above are cross-checked across three methods: owner-earnings discounting, relative valuation, and asset value.

[Target holding period] If bought at a more reasonable price in the future, this is better suited to long-term holding of 5-10 years or more; if bought simply because the AI theme is hot, it does not fit this report's long-term owner framework.

[Expected annualized return] This is an assumption-driven estimate, not a fact. Buying at about 133.99 today and holding for ten years, my rough expectation is: Conservative scenario: -6% to -2% per year; Neutral scenario: 0% to 4% per year; Optimistic scenario: 6% to 10% per year. Earning more than this typically requires the company to keep sustaining extremely high growth while the market still grants it a very high valuation a decade out.

[Maximum loss risk] In the worst case, if Palantir's growth reverts to "excellent but not legendary" and the market reprices it from today's ultra-high valuation down to a more ordinary high-growth software range, a return to 35-60 is not impossible, implying roughly 55% to 75% downside from the current price; and because the company pays no dividend, investors lack a cash-return cushion. This does not require the business to collapse; it only requires "excellent, but not as excellent as today's price demands."

[Tracking metrics] I suggest continuously tracking: U.S. commercial revenue growth; commercial customer count and U.S. commercial customer count; net dollar retention; gross margin and operating margin; operating cash flow and capital expenditure; SBC as a share of revenue; growth in diluted share count; government-business growth and the quality of large contracts; accounts-receivable concentration and collection cadence; and management's buyback and share-issuance behavior.

[Signals that trigger a reassessment] If any of the following occurs, the investment logic should be reviewed immediately: AIP-related commercial growth slows significantly; net retention clearly weakens; operating margin falls back and cannot be explained; SBC rises again and brings accelerating dilution; key government contracts face budget or reputational shocks; management keeps buying back stock at high prices or making low-return capital allocations; and valuation stays elevated while fundamentals begin to deteriorate at the margin.

[Final recommendation] Soberly put, Palantir looks more like a candidate on the watchlist of businesses worth long-term study and patient waiting for the price than a "value entry" you can act on at a glance. If you prize business quality, it is worth following for the long run; if you prize margin of safety, the better move today is not to "chase" but to wait. Wait for a lower price, or wait for the next few years to turn today's high expectations into thicker owner earnings per share, and then decide whether to become a long-term shareholder.

A note on limitations. This report has tried to base its analysis of Palantir's financials, governance, contract quality, and valuation on formal filings and high-quality sources; but a strictly unified ROIC, a precise comparable valuation against the private company Databricks, and a fine-grained breakdown of maintenance capital expenditure still require additional modeling and more underlying data. This report therefore takes a conservative approach rather than false precision.

This report is based on public information and does not constitute investment advice. Markets carry risk; invest with caution.

PalantirAIPFoundryGothamGovernment SoftwareEnterprise AIData PlatformsSBC
Reader Q&A10

Baillie Framework · Ten Questions for Growth Investing

10

Hunting ten-year five-baggers among great growth stocks — pressing the upside question: "Can it get much bigger?"

  • How high is its market ceiling? Is it growing a slice of an existing pie, or creating an entirely new market?8/10

    Conclusion: The ceiling is very high, but Palantir is both "growing a slice of an existing pie" and "using AIP to pry open a new, not-yet-defined pie" — it does both, and the boundary of the latter cannot yet be precisely drawn by anyone today. This is exactly the source of justification for its high valuation, and also its most fragile assumption.

    First, how big is the pie itself. The Baillie Gifford-style line of inquiry is not "is the industry big," but "how large a pool can this company keep capturing share in." The enterprise data + AI application layer where Palantir operates is one of the few truly trillion-dollar arenas that is still accelerating. Gartner forecast in January 2026 that global AI spending will reach about $2.5 trillion in 2026, up 44% year over year, with AI software rising from about $282.9 billion in 2025 to about $453.2 billion in 2026, and AI model spending growing at an even higher rate of about 110%. The $2.52 trillion and +44% cited in the report are consistent with this; Gartner subsequently raised the figure in May to $2.59 trillion, +47%. It must be honestly noted: this is the entire AI pool, and the "serviceable market" Palantir can actually reach is far smaller than this. Applying the whole industry's TAM directly to a single company is the most common overestimation tactic in growth narratives.

    The "growing the existing pie" part is the most solid. In government/defense data integration, Palantir is capturing existing share — it is replacing traditional government IT contractors, custom systems integrators, and scattered internal systems. In 2026Q1, U.S. government revenue grew 84% year over year to $687 million, and in July 2025 the U.S. Army consolidated 75 contracts into a single enterprise service agreement with a $10 billion ceiling and a term of up to ten years — essentially concentrating existing defense software procurement share toward Palantir. This is real, quantifiable displacement of incumbents, but the ceiling is limited by the total size of government budgets and is not infinitely extensible.

    What truly determines the "five-fold imagination" is the "creating a new market" part — AIP connecting large models into real business systems to directly produce business actions. The explosive power of this part is reflected in 2026Q1 U.S. commercial revenue growing 133% year over year to $595 million, and U.S. commercial TCV adding $1.176 billion in the quarter, up 45% year over year. The report judges that "Palantir is expanding from a data platform into an AI operating system that can directly produce business actions" — this "enterprise AI execution layer" did not previously exist as a formed market, and whoever can define it captures the pricing power. But the other side of a "new market" is that the boundary is undefined: today no one can prove that this new pie ultimately goes to Palantir, or whether it gets eaten by the native capabilities of Microsoft, Oracle, and the hyperscale cloud providers.

    The Baillie Gifford-perspective conclusion: the ceiling height is sufficient to support the arithmetic possibility of "five-fold in ten years" — the existing government pie provides a certain foundation, and the AIP new market provides the upside (blue-sky) imagination. But the "reachable height" of this ceiling depends heavily on an unproven assumption: that Palantir can hold the dominant position in value distribution over the long term, in a new market it is creating but that also attracts every giant to rush in. That the market pool is big enough is not the question; the question is how large a slice Palantir can take and for how long.

    Jun 11, 2026
  • Can its revenue at least double over the next five years? Is the growth driven mainly by volume, price, or new business?8/10

    Conclusion: Doubling revenue within five years is almost a "low bar" — at the current growth rate, Palantir is highly likely to double within two to three years, and tripling to quadrupling in five years is within reasonable extrapolation. Growth is led by "volume" (new customers + existing-customer expansion), "new business" (AIP) is the engine of the ramp, and pure "price" (raising prices alone) contributes the least.

    First, let's be clear about how difficult doubling actually is. The Baillie Gifford ten questions ask "can it at least double in five years," which is a real test for most mature companies, but for the current Palantir it is an almost certain lower bound. 2026Q1 revenue was $1.633 billion, up 85% year over year, and the company raised its full-year 2026 guidance to $7.650–7.662 billion, corresponding to about 71% growth. Relative to FY2025's $4.475 billion, 2026 alone approaches +71% — meaning Palantir clears most of the "double in five years" bar in a single year. The real suspense was never "can it double," but "how steeply this 80%+ curve will revert."

    Growth breakdown — "volume" is the absolute mainstay. Palantir's ramp comes first from customer-count expansion and existing-customer add-ons, not from unit-price increases:

    • Customer count (the first source of volume): 2026Q1 total customers were 1,007, up about 31% year over year. The report discloses 780 commercial customers and 615 U.S. commercial customers in the same period, with new logos continuing to pour in.
    • Existing-customer expansion (the second source of volume, and the most critical): 2026Q1 net dollar retention was 150% — meaning a customer base from a year ago, counting no new customers at all, contributes 1.5x revenue by itself this year. This is expansion of "volume" (more seats, more use cases, more workflows) rather than "price" (charging more for the same thing), and is the highest-quality part of Palantir's growth.

    New business (AIP) is the engine of the ramp, not an independent third leg. An honest distinction is needed: AIP is not a new arena parallel to the core business, but a product upgrade that lets the existing data platform "directly execute business actions," thereby lifting per-customer value and penetration depth. Its power flows directly into the "volume" above — U.S. commercial revenue +133% year over year and U.S. commercial TCV +45% year over year are almost entirely AIP-driven new signings and expansions.

    The "price" contribution is the smallest and hardest to isolate on its own. Palantir does have pricing power (82–87% gross margin, embedded in critical processes), but the revenue growth shows almost no component of "the same contract simply raising prices"; its "price" is expressed more as "selling into higher-value use cases," which still falls under volume/structural upgrade rather than price hikes.

    Honest risk note: doubling in five years is a lower bound, not the issue; the issue is the speed of the slope's reversion. The report's counterpoint puts it well — if growth falls back from 85% to 20%–25% and operating margin reverts to 25%–30%, then even if revenue still doubles, the current P/S (TTM) of about 43.5x pricing may not hold. In other words, whether doubling can be achieved is not the bet; "how gently growth decays while doubling" is. From a Baillie Gifford perspective, this company is textbook-strong on the "volume-driven + new-business engine" criterion and deserves a high mark; the deduction comes only from how much future growth it has pulled forward into today's stock price.

    Jun 11, 2026
  • Five years from now, what will take over as the next growth engine? Does this "second curve" exist today?6/10

    Conclusion: The second curve already exists today, and it is precisely the main engine of current growth — it is the AIP-driven U.S. commercial / enterprise AI deployment business. But to be honest: what Palantir truly lacks is not a "second curve," but a clearly visible "third curve." The engine taking over today has already ignited; the one that will take over again five years from now is not yet clearly in view.

    Why the second curve is no longer a "future tense" but a "present continuous." When Baillie Gifford asks whether this curve "exists today," the answer for Palantir is almost the reverse: government/Gotham is the first curve, while the commercial/AIP second curve not only exists but is already running faster than the first. Look at the structural evolution:

    In other words, Palantir has already completed the "raised by government, taken over by commercial" handoff of curves — something many one-trick companies never accomplish in their lifetimes, and it deserves a high mark under the Baillie Gifford framework.

    What keeps the second curve sustainable. AIP's moat is "connecting large models into the customer's real business systems to directly produce actions," bringing high switching costs — 2026Q1 net dollar retention of 150% shows extremely strong existing-customer add-ons. It is not telling a story; it is an engine already collecting cash.

    But what Baillie Gifford should really probe is "where is the third curve" — and here a deduction is unavoidable. When the AIP dividend slows at the margin three to five years out, what takes over next? The candidates visible in the report are still very vague: first, geographic expansion (growth is currently highly concentrated in the U.S., 2026Q1 U.S. revenue $1.282 billion, +104% year over year, with international commercial relatively lagging), and whether it can be replicated overseas is an open question; second, Bootcamp/platformization turning delivery from "labor-intensive" into "replicable at scale," thereby opening up a longer tail of customers; third, agents/automation pushing the "AI operating system" into a deeper execution layer. These all remain at the level of "direction" rather than "an already-realized curve," and cannot be pointed at on the financials the way AIP can be ("it's already here").

    The biggest dependency and risk of this second curve. AIP's success essentially "stands on someone else's model" — it depends on foundation large-model capabilities, inference cost, and cloud platforms. The report nails it: what it most needs to defend is not "whether AI will come," but "once AI is widely adopted and the underlying capabilities are commoditized, can it still capture enough of the value distribution." If foundation models and cloud-native agent capabilities become highly commoditized in the future, this second curve's pricing power will be weakened, and the third curve that could truly hedge this has not yet formed today.

    The Baillie Gifford-perspective conclusion: the second curve already exists and is strong (high mark on this criterion), but on the question of "who takes over five years from now," what Palantir offers today is still a set of possibilities rather than one definite growth pole. It has a present-day engine; what it lacks is a visible next leg — which is exactly what high valuations most need yet are hardest to prove in advance.

    Jun 11, 2026
  • What is its core competitive advantage? Will this moat widen or narrow over the next three to five years?7/10

    Conclusion: Palantir's core moat is "high switching costs + deep process embedding + government security/compliance credentials," not the classic network effect or data monopoly. Over the next three to five years it is highly likely to be "stable to slightly widening" (AIP deepening embedding), but this is a "real yet capped, and surrounded by strong rivals" moat, which cannot be credited as "risk-free widening."

    Where exactly the moat comes from — strong and weak parts must be distinguished, not blanket-elevated. The report breaks the moat down item by item, and this honesty matters:

    • Switching costs (the strongest item, a real moat): Palantir embeds the data ontology, permission model, business processes, and frontline/factory/hospital/battlefield operations into the customer's organization. 2026Q1 net dollar retention of 150% is hard evidence of embedding depth — the deeper a customer uses it, the harder it is to pull out, and the migration cost is not just technical but also includes permissions, processes, and organizational habits. This is the part of Palantir that most resembles a "moat."
    • Government/compliance barriers (the second strongest, scarce and hard to replicate): security certifications, classified-handling capabilities, track record of past performance, and tender qualifications are themselves barriers. The U.S. Army consolidated 75 contracts into an enterprise agreement with a $10 billion ceiling and a term of up to ten years, and 2026Q1 U.S. government revenue grew 84% year over year, showing this barrier has real monetization power.
    • The "weak items" that must be stated honestly: the report explicitly acknowledges — the network effect is weak to moderate (not "more users, more valuable," but "the deeper the use, the harder to switch"); the data advantage is limited (Palantir does not monopolize the world's raw data, and the "data moat" cannot be exaggerated); the scale advantage exists but is not absolute (far smaller than Microsoft/Oracle/AWS, with the advantage only in specific complex scenarios). Laying out these weak items honestly is what prevents this moat from being mis-rated as top-tier.

    Has the moat been converted into profit — this is a plus. A moat alone does not count; what matters is whether it can price. Palantir's FY2025 gross margin was 82%, and 2026Q1 gross margin about 87%, with 2026Q1 GAAP operating margin of 46%. High gross margin plus rapidly rising operating margin shows that switching costs and compliance credentials have truly converted into pricing power and profit, not merely lived on a slide deck.

    Over the next three to five years: widen, stay stable, or narrow? Judged as "stable to slightly widening," with reasons for both sides:

    • Forces widening it: AIP upgrades Palantir from a "data platform" to an "AI operating system that can directly produce business actions," which further raises per-customer value and embedding depth — the more execution links a customer hands over to it, the harder it is to extract. This is the direction of the moat naturally deepening.
    • Forces suppressing the widening (equally real): precisely because this pie is attractive, Microsoft, Oracle, AWS, Google Cloud, Snowflake, and Datadog are all converging toward "data + AI + application workflows." The report repeatedly warns — Palantir running ahead now does not mean it is differentiated forever; if foundation models, agent frameworks, and cloud-native capabilities become highly commoditized, its pricing power will be eroded. So this is "widening like rowing against the current," requiring continuous R&D investment (FY2025 R&D expense of $558 million) to hold, not collecting rent while lying down.

    The Baillie Gifford-perspective conclusion: this moat is real and already monetized on "switching costs + government compliance" (an above-average mark), and AIP provides a reasonable path toward "slight widening"; but it is not the classic, self-reinforcing, ever-widening top-tier moat of a network effect, and it continually faces the double squeeze of giants' flanking integration and capability commoditization. Within three to five years it is highly likely to hold and slightly deepen, but "it will widen" should be discounted when credited, and absolutely cannot be given a full mark as risk-free widening.

    Jun 11, 2026
  • If its core business is disrupted, does it have the gene to reinvent itself? How does it treat mistakes and bad news?6/10

    Conclusion: Palantir has a decent "self-reinvention" track record — it has already successfully completed one major pivot (from a government project-based company into an AIP-driven commercial platform), which is real evidence of a self-reinvention gene; but it has never truly endured a life-or-death moment of "having its core disrupted," so this gene is "half-validated." In treating bad news, its attitude is tough and even combative, which has both merits and hidden risks.

    First, the "empirical evidence" of self-reinvention — it really did pivot, and pivoted beautifully. The "self-reinvention gene" Baillie Gifford asks about cannot rely on declarations; it must rely on history. Palantir's most persuasive point is that it did not get trapped to death in its original identity as a "government data contractor."

    A company that can swap out both its "customer mix" and its "profit model" within ten years is clearly not a rigid body — it has the muscle memory for reinvention. This criterion deserves an above-average mark under the Baillie Gifford framework.

    But this gene is "only half-validated" — it has not truly weathered disruption. The honesty of the report lies in pointing out Palantir's most core fragility: AIP's success "stands on someone else's model," depending on foundation large-model capabilities, inference cost, and cloud platforms. In other words, Palantir's reinventions to date have all been "proactively offensive" (I upgrade while the trend is favorable), not "passively survival-driven" (my core got taken out, forcing me to rebuild). The scenario that truly tests the self-reinvention gene — for example, foundation models and cloud-native agent capabilities becoming highly commoditized, turning the "AI execution layer" into a standard offering from the big players — that blade has not yet truly come down. We therefore do not know whether, when Palantir's differentiation is pulled out from under it, it will pivot nimbly as it has before, or lose the fulcrum for reinvention because it relies too heavily on the external model ecosystem. Equating "having pivoted" directly with "being able to rise again even when disrupted" is the easiest over-elevation to commit on this question.

    How it treats mistakes and bad news — tough, a double-edged sword. Palantir's corporate character is distinct: facing controversy, it tends to confront head-on rather than quietly placate. The most typical case is the UK NHS data controversy — Palantir publicly accused the British Medical Association (BMA) of "choosing ideology over patient interest", and refused to back down even under pressure from the UK Parliament's Science, Innovation and Technology Committee recommending the government consider exercising a break clause in 2027.

    • Merit: this character of "not being swayed by public opinion, sticking to its own judgment" is, in long-doubted industries like to-G/defense, instead a survival trait — it will not abandon its strategic direction over a moment's public sentiment.
    • Hidden risk: combativeness also means it may underestimate the depreciation of "public credibility," a soft asset. A company that embeds critical processes into government and healthcare systems, once it continually opposes the public and regulators on "transparency/data governance," may over the long term erode the political foundation for renewals and expansion — exactly the public-opinion/regulatory disruption the report lists as a major risk.

    The Baillie Gifford-perspective conclusion: the self-reinvention gene "has empirical evidence but has not been tested by a crisis" (an above-average mark rather than full); treating bad news with a "candid, tough attitude" is a merit, but "whether it can truly rise again when disrupted" remains an open, untested proposition. It has proven in the past that it will evolve; it has not yet had the chance to prove that it can rise again from a desperate situation — and the high valuation precisely embeds the optimistic assumption that "it definitely can."

    Jun 11, 2026
  • Does management (especially the founders) have a long-term vision, with interests deeply aligned with the company? Are they willing to sacrifice current profit for five to ten years out?7/10

    Conclusion: Yes — management is a textbook "long-term vision + founders deeply aligned + willing to sacrifice the present for the long term" team — the trait Baillie Gifford values most, and Palantir should score high on this dimension. But an honest deduction is also required: its alignment method is "super voting rights + extremely heavy equity incentives + symbolic buybacks when overvalued," which is not friendly to minority shareholders, and governance must be viewed at a discount.

    Long-term vision and deep alignment — the positive evidence is solid. Baillie Gifford favors teams where "the founders are in place, interests are bound tight to the company, and they dare to invest for five to ten years out," and Palantir is almost a model:

    • The founding team is in place long-term with a stable direction: Alex Karp, Stephen Cohen, and Peter Thiel are still the core, and the company's strategy has been consistent for over a decade (from defense data to AIP), not the frequent swings of professional managers under short tenures.
    • Control is firmly in the founders' hands: the report discloses that the three founders maintain a total voting power cap of close to 49.999999% through the Founder Voting Agreement / Class F structure, with Karp himself holding large amounts of Class B/Class F and exercisable interests. The "binding" of interest alignment is real binding — the founders' net worth is highly aligned with the company's long-term value.
    • Willing to sacrifice current profit for the long term: the strongest evidence is its history of "not contracting even amid long-term losses" — years of continuously heavy investment in the R&D and sales engines is what bought today's realization. Even after turning profitable, FY2025 still invested $558 million in R&D expense, without cutting investment in the future to dress up short-term profit. This is exactly the "firing for years 3-10" capital-allocation orientation Baillie Gifford wants.

    But the "method" of alignment requires a deduction — this is the core of honesty. The same facts, viewed from another angle, are governance risk, and the report does not dodge it:

    The Baillie Gifford-perspective conclusion: management's "long-term vision + interest alignment + daring to sacrifice the present" is real and strong (a high mark for the core of this dimension); but the alignment means (super voting rights + heavy SBC) are unfriendly to outside shareholders, and buyback discipline is mediocre, requiring a clear deduction on "governance friendliness to minority shareholders." In other words — this is a team you would be willing to let steer for you for ten years, but you have to accept that "once you board its ship, the steering wheel is never in your hands, and the ticket comes with continuous dilution costs."

    Jun 11, 2026
  • If it disappeared tomorrow, how much would customers miss it? Is its growth method sustainable, not reliant on harming society and regulation?6/10

    Conclusion: Two sides to consider — "indispensability" is strong: if Palantir disappeared tomorrow, the government and large-enterprise customers running critical processes on its platform would miss it greatly, and migration would be enormously painful; but the "social/regulatory sustainability of its growth method" is its real soft spot: in sensitive areas like defense, law enforcement, immigration, and healthcare, its expansion inherently comes with public-credibility and regulatory friction, and this side must be honestly deducted. Only when both dimensions pass does it count as a high mark, and Palantir is "high indispensability, questionable social sustainability."

    The first side — indispensability: quite high. The core of this Baillie Gifford question is "would customers miss it," which corroborates the switching costs in the moat. Palantir is not a lightweight tool that can be unplugged once installed, but embeds the data ontology, permission model, business processes, and frontline/factory/hospital/battlefield operations into the customer's organization. Hard evidence:

    So the answer to "how much it would be missed" is: for deep customers, Palantir disappearing would mean paralysis of core processes and a lengthy rebuild — a high mark for indispensability.

    The second side — social/regulatory sustainability: this is a real soft spot and must be honestly deducted. On the additional "not reliant on harming society and regulation" dimension that Baillie Gifford adds, Palantir does not answer well. Its most profitable, stickiest business (defense, law enforcement, immigration, healthcare data) is precisely the area the public and regulators are most sensitive to, and the controversy is structural, not incidental:

    This shows that Palantir's growth has indeed touched the boundary of "social acceptability" in certain regions — even where it is legally compliant, large public-sector projects may be reassessed or even terminated due to shifts in the political climate. The report is right to list this as a major risk: on the criterion of "not harming society and regulation," its growth method cannot be given a clean bill of health.

    Putting the two sides together — a subtle tension. Palantir's indispensability is partly built precisely on its involvement in those "sensitive but essential" areas; and it is exactly these areas that discount its social/regulatory sustainability. It is not the kind of company whose "growth is built on harming users" (like addictive business models), but it is indeed one whose "growth is built on sensitive data power that triggers social controversy" — these two carry different risk natures, but both constitute disturbances to "clean long-term compounding."

    The Baillie Gifford-perspective conclusion: indispensability is high (a high mark), social/regulatory sustainability is questionable (a clear deduction). That customers can't do without it is a fact, but whether it can grow these sensitive businesses big and long without continually inflaming opposition from the public and regulators is an unsettled question that clearly drags on long-term certainty. Treating it as a "clean, frictionlessly compounding for ten years" target would underestimate this layer of structural political/public-opinion risk.

    Jun 11, 2026
  • What are the unit economics of this business (gross margin, incremental returns)? Do they get better or worse as it scales? Where is the money it earns spent?7/10

    Conclusion: The unit economics are excellent, and clearly improve as it scales — high gross margin, light capex, strong operating leverage, high incremental returns. This is Palantir's most scrutiny-resistant dimension and the one that most deserves a high mark. The only place that needs an honest discount: it is not "zero-marginal-cost pure SaaS" (it carries delivery/on-site deployment costs), and a considerable portion of "the money earned" is distributed to employees as equity incentives, diluting the returns owners actually take home.

    Gross margin — high and rising, getting better with scale. FY2025 gross margin was 82%, and 2026Q1 gross margin about 87%. Gross margin rising with scale shows higher productization and falling unit delivery costs — a sign of "bigger is better" rather than "bigger is more tiring." But it must be honestly noted: the cost line includes third-party cloud hosting, subcontractors, and on-site service staff, so it carries an implementation/delivery-layer cost and is not Coca-Cola-style zero-marginal-cost. This does not affect the "excellent" verdict; it only marks down "top-tier pure software" by one notch.

    Operating leverage — this is the brightest part of the unit economics. The trajectory of operating margin is itself a report card of incremental returns: from -27% in 2021 → 32% in FY2025 → 46% in 2026Q1. The report is right — this was not squeezed out by layoffs or short-term cost suppression, but by "strong revenue growth layered with the release of operating leverage." In other words, for every additional dollar of revenue, a rising proportion falls to operating profit, and the incremental returns are excellent. Layered with 2026Q1 revenue +85% year over year, this is a textbook case of scale amplifying unit economics.

    Capex is extremely light — growth barely consumes money. FY2025 capex was only about $33.88 million, almost negligible relative to $4.475 billion in revenue. This means Palantir's growth is "asset-light" — it does not need to keep pouring heavy capital into expansion, a very valuable trait in unit economics, and the root cause of why its cash flow can scale rapidly. The direction of incremental capital returns is already very good: FY2025 operating profit of $1.414 billion, no interest-bearing debt on the books, extremely light capex (the report does not give a single-point ROIC due to definitional reasons, but the direction is clearly strong).

    Cash flow — the unit economics convert into real cash. FY2025 free cash flow was about $2.101 billion, and 2026Q1 adjusted free cash flow $925 million, a 57% margin. High gross margin + light capex + strong operating leverage, layered together, let revenue convert efficiently into cash — the ultimate validation that the unit economics are excellent.

    Where the money earned is spent — the rational part coexists with flaws:

    • The best spending: continuing to invest in the high-return product and sales engines (FY2025 R&D $558 million), the correct action of reinvesting high incremental returns to compound bigger.
    • The controversial spending (deduction needed): a large amount "distributed to employees" as equity incentives — FY2025 SBC of $684 million. This means a slice of the excellent unit economics does not truly land in existing shareholders' pockets, but is diluted to employees. The report's conservative framing is valuable: after deducting recurring SBC as a real cost, FY2025 "conservative owner earnings" were about $1.417 billion, and TTM about $1.958 billion — still strong, but not as dramatic as the "FCF stock star chart" looks.
    • The poor spending: symbolic buybacks when overvalued, and never paying dividends (see the management dimension), reflecting that the unit economics are excellent but capital-return discipline is mediocre.

    The Baillie Gifford-perspective conclusion: unit economics (gross margin, operating leverage, incremental returns, light capex) is the strongest of all Palantir's dimensions, clearly improving with scale, and deserves a high mark. The only discount is — it is not zero-marginal-cost pure SaaS, and a considerable portion of "the money earned" dilutes owners in the form of SBC. The business's own earning power is first-rate; the part that truly lands in shareholders' pockets must be discounted with a more conservative framing.

    Jun 11, 2026
  • For it to rise five-fold in ten years, what conditions need to hold simultaneously? Are these conditions realistic? What does today's stock price imply?3/10

    Conclusion: For Palantir to rise five-fold in ten years, three things need to hold simultaneously — "sustained ultra-high growth + maintaining extremely high margins long term + the market still willing to give a generous valuation ten years out" — and because today's starting valuation is already extremely high, all three must lean toward the optimistic end at once. The realism is "not nonexistent, but the requirements are very demanding." Today's stock price already implies the expectation that "Palantir must nearly do all of the above," leaving buyers a margin of safety close to zero. Under the Baillie Gifford framework, the price has overdrawn the imagination on this item, and a clear deduction is warranted.

    What conditions must hold simultaneously for five-fold in ten years. Break it into testable premises, rather than a single "keep being great":

    • Condition one · growth cannot collapse: revenue must maintain a growth rate far above large software companies for a very long time. The base is not bad — 2026Q1 revenue +85% year over year, full-year 2026 guidance about +71%. But five-fold requires this curve to decay slowly enough, not one year of high growth.
    • Condition two · margins cannot fall back: operating margin must stay high long term. The current 2026Q1 GAAP operating margin of 46% is already top-tier, and the five-fold narrative requires it not to be dragged down by competition and price wars.
    • Condition three · valuation cannot mean-revert: this is the most overlooked yet most lethal one. The market must still be willing to give it a multiple far above ordinary software stocks ten years out. Today's static P/E of about 146–154, P/S (TTM) of about 43.5, P/FCF of about 136 — if the multiple ten years out only reverts to the "mature high-growth software stock" range, then even if profit multiplies several times, the stock price could tread water or even decline.
    • Condition four · dilution and governance do not drag: SBC no longer runs out of control, and the super-voting-rights structure does not trigger major capital misallocation.

    Are these conditions realistic — demanding but not a fantasy. Item by item: growth (condition one) and margins (condition two) have a realistic basis in the short-to-medium term given current fundamentals, and Palantir's execution is indeed strong. The real difficulty is condition three: it requires "excellent operations" and "the market's continued generous pricing" not to slip for as long as ten years simultaneously. Historically, very few companies have, from such a high starting valuation, "digested the valuation through growth" via fundamentals while the stock still rose five-fold — this requires the company to be not just great, but "even greater than today's pricing already requires." The report's judgment is restrained: this is not impossible, but it belongs to the optimistic end of blue-sky imagination, and treating it as the base case is dangerous.

    What does today's stock price imply — this is the core of the question. Using the anchors from the report's three Owner Earnings discount scenarios:

    In other words, the expectation implied by today's price is even more aggressive than the most optimistic tier in the report's model: it requires a higher starting point, a longer period of ultra-high growth, and a lower discount rate or higher exit multiple, all layered together. From another angle, the current free cash flow yield is under 1%, while the 10-year Treasury is about 4.59% — buying it means forgoing current cash returns and placing the entire bet on "extreme success over the next ten years." The report's ten-year expected annualized return ranges are conservative -6%-2%, neutral 0%4%, optimistic 6%~10%, and only the optimistic end approaches the "five-fold" magnitude, while that end requires all conditions to land in the best cells at once.

    The Baillie Gifford-perspective conclusion: five-fold in ten years is not arithmetically impossible (conditions one and two have a realistic basis), but it requires "sustained ultra-high growth + extremely high margins + the market's long-term generous valuation" to hold simultaneously, and because the starting valuation already exceeds the report's optimistic-scenario upper bound, it leaves almost no room for error. This item must be honestly deducted — not on business quality, but on "the price having pulled forward and overdrawn the five-fold story." Baillie Gifford is willing to pay a premium for great growth, but when the price itself is built on "everything must be perfect," the upside is overdrawn and the downside is amplified — which is exactly the fundamental reason the report gives "Watch" rather than "Buy."

    Jun 11, 2026
  • Why hasn't the market realized all this yet? Is it that they can't understand it, look down on it, or can't see far enough? What would become the "narrative inflection point"?3/10

    Conclusion: For a stock like Palantir, that classic Baillie Gifford line of inquiry must be asked in reverse — the market is not "yet to realize how good it is," but "has already fully priced in (or perhaps over-priced) its goodness (and more)." So there is almost no cognitive-gap dividend here from "can't understand / look down on it"; it is closer to "seeing too far, discounting ten-years-out success into today." The narrative inflection point is therefore two-directional: a downward inflection (either growth or valuation loosening) is more realistic than an upward one. Under the Baillie Gifford framework, the cognitive gap on this item points in a negative direction, and a deduction is warranted.

    First, correct the premise of the question — this is not a stock that is "undervalued, market doesn't get it." This Baillie Gifford question presupposes that "the market may not understand, look down on, or see far enough," but applied to Palantir it must be honest: it is one of the most watched, most thoroughly researched, and most publicly debated companies in the current U.S. market. The evidence is the valuation itself — static P/E about 146–154, P/S (TTM) about 43.5, P/FCF about 136, current stock price about $130.53, market cap about $310–330 billion. The market is not "looking down on" it; on the contrary, it has given it the expectation-pricing of "one of the best large software platforms." The report's judgment is apt: you cannot call it cheap just because peers are also expensive; the more reasonable understanding is — its goodness has already been seen by the market and generously paid for.

    Examining the three possibilities of "can't understand / look down on / can't see far" item by item, almost none hold:

    So where is the real "cognitive gap" — in the pricing of risk, not in growth. If there is anything on Palantir still systematically underestimated by the market, it is not its growth (that is fully or even over-priced), but its downside risk being underestimated. The counter-logic the report points out most deserves serious attention: if revenue growth falls back from 50%+ to 20%–25%, operating margin reverts to 25%–30%, and the multiple the market is willing to give compresses from over 100x to 30–50x Owner Earnings, then current buyers' ten-year returns could be only low single digits or even negative — and this "does not require the company to decline, only requires it to be excellent but not as excellent as today's stock price demands." In the market's current pricing, the probability weight given to "mean reversion," the most likely scenario, is too low — that is the side truly being overlooked.

    What would become the "narrative inflection point" — two-directional, but downward is more realistic:

    • The downward inflection (more realistic, any of several triggers suffices): first, U.S. commercial growth clearly decelerating for several consecutive quarters, breaking the "infinite AIP penetration" narrative; second, net dollar retention (currently 150%) weakening, shaking the core belief of "embedded so deep it can't be pulled out"; third, large government deals hit by budget/public-opinion shocks (such as the spread of controversies like the UK NHS contract being recommended by Parliament for consideration of termination in 2027); fourth, margins falling back with no productization explanation; fifth, SBC running out of control again, bringing accelerated dilution. Any of these materializing could lead the market to redirect the valuation from "perfectly priced" toward "normal high-growth software," which is exactly what the report calls "the biggest permanent capital-loss scenario is not necessarily the company declining, but a good company + too-high purchase price + mediocre ten-year returns."
    • The upward inflection (exists but harder): it would require AIP to make U.S. commercial even bigger than the already very high expectations the market holds, or a brand-new third growth curve to be validated, or margins to step up another level — the difficulty being that much of this "goodness" has already been digested by the price in advance, and what can truly drive the stock substantially higher again must be a surprise that "exceeds the already very optimistic consensus."

    The Baillie Gifford-perspective conclusion: the answer to this question for Palantir is "the market has not missed its goodness; instead, it may have missed its fragility" — the direction of the cognitive gap is negative, and there is no "buy what others discard" undervaluation dividend. The narrative inflection point exists in both directions, but at such a high starting valuation, the downward inflection has a lower threshold and is more realistic. This is consistent with the report's conclusion of "passes on the business, fails on the price" and "Watch rather than Buy": it is an excellent company, but today's price demands everything be perfect, and perfection is the easiest thing to break — which is exactly where a high-valuation target most deserves an honest deduction, rather than being elevated for the growth narrative.

    Jun 11, 2026
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