NEW YORK, January 2, 2026, 10:14 ET — Regular session
- Palantir shares slipped about 0.4% in mid-morning trading, lagging a broader tech rebound.
- Investors are weighing lofty valuation metrics as AI-linked stocks trade mixed.
- Focus is turning to an expected early-February earnings window and updates on commercial AI adoption.
Palantir Technologies (PLTR) shares fell 0.4% to $177.04 on Friday, while the Nasdaq-tracking Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) rose about 1.1% in early trade.
The move matters because Palantir has been one of the market’s most closely watched “AI software” names after a sharp 2025 rally, leaving little room for stumbles as investors reset positions for the new year. The Motley Fool
At current levels, the stock remains about 15% below its 52-week high of $207.52, keeping attention on whether momentum returns as the year’s first trading week gets underway. The Motley Fool
Broader U.S. stocks were higher, with the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) up about 0.6% and Nvidia (NVDA) up about 3.0%.
AI-linked software shares were mixed, with Snowflake (SNOW) up about 0.9% and CrowdStrike (CRWD) down about 1.0%.
A recent note from Wedbush’s Dan Ives highlighted what he called “unprecedented” demand for Palantir’s AI platform, even as debate around valuation persists across the group. TipRanks
Palantir sells data-analysis software to government agencies and businesses, and has pushed its Artificial Intelligence Platform, or AIP, as a way for customers to deploy AI models on their own data.
Valuation remains a key fault line. The Motley Fool noted the stock was trading at roughly 435 times trailing earnings and about 188 times forward earnings — based on expected profit — levels that can amplify reactions to growth and margin updates. The Motley Fool
The shares traded between $176.54 and $182.93 on Friday, after closing at $177.75 in the prior session.
The next major catalyst is the company’s quarterly report. Palantir has not confirmed its next earnings date, and Wall Street Horizon lists an unconfirmed Feb. 2 after-market slot for results. Wall Street Horizon
Investors will be looking for signs that U.S. commercial demand can sustain recent momentum, alongside any guidance on how quickly AIP deployments translate into durable revenue.
For now, Palantir’s underperformance versus the broader tech rebound underscores a familiar theme: high-multiple AI software stocks can rally hard, but they often require steady execution — and clear visibility — to keep buyers engaged.