Palantir Stock vs. Alphabet Stock: Wall Street Says Buy One and Sell the Other

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Artificial intelligence (AI) platforms bring together the software tools needed to develop, deploy, and evaluate AI models and applications. Spending on AI platform services is expected to increase rapidly, so much so that they “will be the fastest growing technology in the years to come,” according to IDC analyst Andrea Minonne.

Palantir Technologies (NYSE: PLTR) and Alphabet (NASDAQ: GOOGL) (NASDAQ: GOOG) should both benefit from that trend. But Wall Street expects the stocks to move in opposite directions over the next year, as detailed below:

  • Palantir has a median 12-month price target of $28 per share. That forecast implies 37% downside from its current share price of $45.

  • Alphabet has a median 12-month price target of $205 per share. That forecast implies 24% upside from its current share price of $165.

In short, most Wall Street analysts expect Palantir stock to decline during the next year, and they expect Alphabet stock to climb higher. Here are the important details.

Palantir sells analytics software to commercial and government customers. Its primary platforms, Foundry and Gotham, let businesses capture data, develop models, and surface insights with analytical applications. Its adjacent AIP (Artificial Intelligence Platform) product brings natural language processing capabilities to Foundry and Gotham, which lets businesses apply generative AI to their operations.

In August, Forrester Research recognized Palantir a leader in artificial intelligence and machine learning (ML) platforms. The report highlighted strong capabilities in data ingestion and preparation, and an intuitive user interface, as reasons why “Palantir is quietly becoming one of the largest players in this market.” In September, Palantir was a top-ranked vendor in Dresner Advisory Services’ report on model operations, a discipline that deals with the development, deployment, and maintenance of analytical models.

Palantir continued to build momentum in the second quarter. Its customer count rose 41%, and the average existing customer spent 14% more. In turn, revenue rose 27% to $678 million, and non-GAAP earnings increased 80% to $0.09 per diluted share. Importantly, the company touted the success of its go-to-market strategy with AIP, which uses interactive workshops called bootcamps to engage prospective clients.

Palantir’s business is fundamentally solid. It has a strong competitive position in an industry projected to grow quickly, and it is executing on that opportunity. But the stock has a serious drawback in its price tag. Wall Street expects Palantir’s adjusted earnings to increase at 22% annually over the next 12 months. That makes the current valuation of 140 times adjusted earnings look utterly absurd.

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