Palantir PLTR

4nursebee

Recycles dryer sheets
Joined
Jun 23, 2014
Messages
71
I am searching for feedback on PLTR as an investment.

Do you have any knowledge of the products, how do they stack up and function? How do competitor products compare? What are long term prospects of the company?

Most of what I can find online are from view building utubers and the CEO in videos that do not allow comments.

Thank you.
 
I think PLTR has a strong and unique software offering that is well positioned to ride the AI craze. Their main competitor is not other companies, but people inside companies that have a vested interest in home-grown software solutions and do not want to have an outside company coming in.

Hertz is using there software to manage the car fleet. British Petroleum has been using there software very successfully. The military and spy agencies are also big users.

I think it is a bit over priced now and will likely present future opportunities to buy some if you are patient. I think that it will be a nice company in five or ten years. It recently showed its first two quarters of profit, but only a little bit.

I suggest you watch some Tom Nash youtube videos on PLTR and watch some of the videos where PLTR showcases satisfied customers like BP.

Cathy Wood had dropped PLTR in her ARKK funds saying it would take too long, but has just resumed buying PLTR. Her detractors might say that is the kiss of death for PLTR :)
 
I was interested in this company as well, after seeing some of the hype around them and seeing the CEO being interviewed on financial TV. This is a very subjective opinion but I get both positive and negative vibes about the company after listening to the CEO. (not that anyone should invest based on a "vibe"). I presume the CEO is also a founder and he seems straightforward enough but perhaps a little too humble+confident in their software offering. More critically but still a very subjective opinion was how their software offering was complex and sophisticated, but also simple enough for customers to integrate into their specific environment. Where the customer could mix-n-match Palantir modules with their own as they saw fit, but where Palantir provided enough value that customers mostly chose their off-the-shelf + customized offerings. I have not dug deeper into the company but what I could learn was always too high level and abstract to make any real judgement.
 
There is a recent video showing their military logistics software detecting an enemy, reviewing flexible responses, assessing available resources, planning the trip to the fight, then issuing the orders and coordinating the responding units. The entire human interaction seemed to be using natural language with a chat GPT type interface.

I thought it was impressive. My friend who works for one of the big "non profit" think tanks advising DOD did not. But Palantir is a competitor to the build it yourself mindset that feeds his company.

Palantir's seems to get things done and have stuff that works now. Last year I asked my friend for an example of where the military was using his block chain logistics stuff. He said that soon, a committee would be deciding if there should be a committee to consider developing something using the technology.
 
I have invested in Palantir for about three years now at the suggestion of Neil Howe (Fourth Turning author).

Here is an interesting video of an interview with Amit Kukreja and Adam Bergman for a wide-ranging conversation on Palantir, investing, and a whole lot more!

from Keith Fitz-Gerald:

Sooner or later, every stock that takes off attracts naysayers the way hot dogs on the grill attract hungry picnickers.

Palantir is no exception.

Frankly, I don’t give a rat’s you-know-what because that’s how Wall Street plays the game. They’ve spent billions of dollars learning how to push your buttons in ways that make you scared, uncertain, doubtful... because they know that makes it easier to separate you from your money.

The way we—you and I—win as investors is a) to rewrite the rules on our terms, and b) to pick battles that they have no interest in fighting.

Keep your emotions out of the equation.

One way to handle that as an investor is to buy a little at a time, using Value Cost Averaging (VCA) or Dollar Cost Averaging (DCA) to control risk while harnessing the volatility others fear. Another is to use LowBall Orders as a way to accumulate shares at prices YOU are prepared to pay over time. You could also Sell Cash-Secured Puts to get paid as you “shop.”

Trading is different. If that’s the way you roll, you want to be prepared for who’s on the other side of the trade.

Cue the music...

 
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From SIMPLY WALLst:

ScreenShot_20230609104407.jpeg
 
Palantir has employee retention issues that probably affect their growth rate. Multiple online employee boards and other sources indicate it is more severe than expected in its industry.
 
PLTR | Palantir Technologies
Nov 15

High number of new and inexperienced directors

There are 9 new directors who have joined the board in the last 3 years.
The company's board is composed of:

9 new directors.
No experienced directors.
3 highly experienced directors.

Co-Founder, CEO & Director Alex Karp is the most experienced director on the board, commencing their role in 2003.

The following issues are considered to be risks according to the Simply Wall St Risk Model:

Lack of board continuity.
Lack of experienced directors.
 
The only ray of sunshine.

Glad I doubled my position when they fell to $7.50 last year or the year before.

Now if only TSLA can catch some wind. My model Y has been driving itself 99% of the time. Very rarely do I have to take over. Night and day from last year. People do not realize that Tesla is poised to deliver AI at scale.

PLTR is the Levi Straus of the AI gold rush.
 
I did not realize PLTR was up so much.

Regarding Telsa, didn't Musk divert a big shipment of NVDA chips as they were not prepared to use them? I don't follow Telsa closely and I disagree with the lilkes of Cathie Wood in that I don't see how AI has very much to do with self-driving. Telsa could double the number of drving trips its stores in the data center and it makes very little difference IMO. As driving is mostly a realtime reactionary task, whether a person or software is in control. Unfortunately there are distracted and unsafe humans mixed in with the computers.
 
Tesla currently has two humanoid (C3P0) robots working in their factory and plans to have 2000 next year once the improved hand is ready. At some point the robot business will be larger than its car business.

The car uses end to end neural networks. That sounds like AI to me.

Last month my car saw a chipmunk in the grass ready to run across the road and slowed to spare the chipmunk.

You are spot on about the human drivers being the danger on the roads.
 
Shares of artificial intelligence-powered data analytics company Palantir Technologies, Inc. PLTR climbed sharply in premarket trading on Monday.

The gains can be traced back to a late-Friday announcement from S&P Dow Jones Indices that Palantir would be added to the S&P 500 Index, ahead of the start of trading on Sept. 23. Despite widespread anticipation, the S&P had snubbed Palantir in its two previous quarterly rebalancing.

 
2 – Palantir: you ain't seen nothin’ yet!
Shares are +10.98% on the day as I type.

What’s more, shares have returned 96.88% YTD and 120.91% over the past 12 months.

Millions of investors wait for confirmation (like the S&P 500 inclusion) before buying which means they’re just now figuring out at $33 what I shared with you at $6-7 and repeatedly during the course of what is now a ~+450% ride. Companies like Palantir are rarer than hen’s teeth which is why, when you find one, that you want to latch on as early in the game as possible using tactics that ensure you can stay “in to win.”

"Five With Fitz"
 
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