Palantir (PLTR) stock has effectively gone from AI favorite to AI laggard.
Though we saw a resurgence late last week, shares are down seven straight sessions and remain down 37% in 2026, as investors fret over the stock’s valuation and the competitive edge it may be harder to defend.
Hence, the market is treating Palantir with caution. UBS is taking the other side.
After recent meetings with top executives and Palantir’s latest AIPCon event, 5-star analyst Karl Keirstead came away with a more bullish read than the recent stock action suggests.
For perspective, Keirstead’s 5-star rating from TipRanks ranks him No. 542 among 12,331 Wall Street analysts and No. 1,294 among 28,973 experts. His calls show a 61% success rate, with 251 of 411 ratings profitable, and an average return of 13% per rating, adding weight to his Palantir view.
Kierstead isn’t ignoring the debate over AI competition, but he appears far less worried than the market does.
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images
What UBS says investors are missing about Palantir stock
UBS analyst Karl Keirstead is pushing back against the stock market’s colder view of Palantir as worries mount over OpenAI, Anthropic, Databricks, and others moving deeper into the company’s territory.
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Keirstead sees that fear as incomplete.
“At 46x our 2027E FCF, we believe that Palantir shares are undervalued relative to medium-term growth,” he said, pointing to an estimated 3-year CAGR of about 55% and high profitability.
According to Seeking Alpha, Palantir’s profitability profile looks pristine to say the least. Its 84% gross margin is far above the sector median of around 50%, while its 44% net income margin sharply outpaces peers.
Just as important, Palantir’s 34% levered free cash flow margin shows that its growth is converting efficiently into cash.
At the heart of UBS’s argument is the idea that investors may be treating Palantir as just another AI software layer.
After meetings with management and Palantir’s latest AIPCon, Keirstead highlighted the company’s “complexity and depth”, saying its operating system goes beyond LLM deployment, data ingestion, and semantic layers.
According to him, no AIPCon customer said LLMs can currently replace Palantir for data workloads. A global systems-integration partner also said Palantir’s “action engine” gives it a “5-year moat”.
Why Palantir’s AI moat is back in focus
Palantir’s AI moat has been unshakeable over the years.
What it has done so brilliantly is connect AI to messy real-world operations where decisions, permissions, workflows, and data quality matter.
Front and center are its ontology layer and operating system, which help a company map how its business actually works, then let AI act within that map.
The recent wins show why that matters.
SAP expanded its work with Palantir in May to use AIP for AI-supported data migration, a painful enterprise problem where mistakes can prove to be incredibly costly. Palantir says its AIP tools helped move more than 20,000 SAP location records to S/4HANA in two weeks.
The same pattern appears outside software. Reuters reported in January that Palantir signed a multi-year HD Hyundai deal worth hundreds of millions of dollars after its tools helped lift shipbuilding production by about 30%.
Government work adds another proof point. Reuters reported last year that the U.S. Army consolidated software contracts into a Palantir enterprise deal worth up to $10 billion over 10 years.
So even though LLMs can be powerful, Palantir is selling the layer that turns AI into controlled decisions inside complex institutions.
Wall Street price targets for Palantir stock
- Wedbush’s Dan Ives has a $230 target, the most aggressive named bull case, tied to Palantir’s AI demand, according to Yahoo Finance.
- Citi’s Tyler Radke cut Palantir to $210 ahead of Q1 but kept a buy rating, citing broader software weakness, according to Investor’s Business Daily.
- Morgan Stanley kept an Equal Weight rating and $205 target, balancing AI upside against valuation risk, according to TheStreet.
- MarketBeat puts Palantir’s average target at $192.76, with a high of $255 and a low of $90.
Sources: Yahoo Finance, Investor’s Business Daily, TheStreet, and MarketBeat.
Palantir’s chart is still in repair mode
Barchart’s June 29 technical table shows Palantir stock is still looking to mount a snapback, but the trend is still damaged.
The stock is down 25% over 20 days, 30% versus the 200-day period, and 34% year to date. Hence, the recent bounce hasn’t reversed the larger sell-off.
The first level to watch is the 5-day moving average at $113. Holding above that would show short-term buyers are still defending the rebound. The bigger test is the 20-day average at $130.20, followed by the 50-day average at $136. A move back above those levels would make the recovery look more credible.
Momentum is still weak. Relative strength sits between 39 and 46, while stochastic readings near 10% to 20% suggest the stock is beaten down but not yet out of the woods.
Volatility is also high, with the average true range near 5.3%-5.9%, suggesting Palantir could keep swinging sharply before a clearer trend returns.
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