Today: 10 June 2026
Palantir stock tumbles 5.6% to start 2026 as pricey AI names face a reality check
3 January 2026
2 mins read

Palantir stock tumbles 5.6% to start 2026 as pricey AI names face a reality check

NEW YORK, Jan 3, 2026, 09:33 ET — Market closed

  • Palantir Technologies ended Friday down 5.6% at $167.86, after trading as low as $166.38.
  • The pullback came as U.S. chipmakers rallied while the tech-heavy Nasdaq finished slightly lower on the first session of 2026.
  • Traders are watching key technical levels and next week’s U.S. jobs data, a fresh test for high-multiple growth stocks.

Palantir Technologies Inc. shares fell 5.6% on Friday to close at $167.86, ending the first U.S. trading session of 2026 with a sharp pullback in one of the market’s most closely watched AI-linked software names.

The slide mattered because it landed as investors rotated toward AI “infrastructure” winners such as chipmakers, while trimming exposure to some high-valuation growth stocks that drove much of last year’s gains. The Nasdaq dipped 0.03% even as the Dow rose 0.66% and the S&P 500 added 0.19%. Reuters

Joe Mazzola, head of trading and derivatives strategy at Charles Schwab, said investors were paying closer attention to pricing in the AI trade. “But I do think that investors might be a little bit more conscious about some of the valuations that they’re paying for some of the AI plays,” he told Reuters. Reuters

Palantir opened at $181.35 and swung between $182.93 and $166.38, with about 60.6 million shares changing hands, according to market data.

From a chart standpoint, the drop pushed Palantir below its 50-day moving average of $181.20 and left it near its 200-day moving average of $168.89, levels some traders use as quick gauges of short- and long-term trend. Palantir’s 12-month range stands at $63.40 to $207.52, according to MarketBeat.

Palantir sells data-integration and analytics software used by governments and businesses, and it has been positioned by investors as a beneficiary of wider adoption of artificial intelligence tools in day-to-day operations.

The company’s last quarterly update in November projected fourth-quarter revenue of $1.327 billion to $1.331 billion, above Wall Street expectations at the time, and raised its full-year revenue outlook, citing demand for its AI-powered services.

Friday’s market tone did not help. Chip stocks rallied, but several megacap tech names such as Apple and Microsoft fell, and Treasury yields moved higher as investors looked ahead to a new batch of delayed economic data after the U.S. government shutdown.

Markets are now re-pricing how much they are willing to pay for growth as attention shifts from last year’s AI enthusiasm to near-term catalysts: interest-rate expectations, labor-market data and the durability of corporate tech spending.

With U.S. markets closed Saturday, the next test for Palantir comes Monday, when traders will watch whether the stock can stabilize around longer-term support levels after Friday’s late-session slide.

Any renewed jump in Treasury yields could keep pressure on richly valued software shares, which tend to be more sensitive to interest-rate moves because investors discount more of their value from future earnings.

Investors will also track the timing of Palantir’s next quarterly report. Wall Street Horizon lists an unconfirmed earnings date of Feb. 2, after market, based on historical reporting patterns rather than a company announcement.

When that update arrives, traders are likely to focus on revenue growth, demand for Palantir’s AI platform, and any 2026 outlook that supports — or challenges — the premium valuation investors have assigned to the stock.

Stock Market Today

  • Top 3 ASX Dividend Stocks to Watch with Yields Up to 7.8%
    June 10, 2026, 4:48 PM EDT. Australian investors eye dividend stocks amid market volatility for stable income. Peet (ASX:PPC) offers a 7.81% yield, GWA Group (ASX:GWA) yields 7.31%, and Cedar Woods Properties (ASX:CWP) provides 4.4%. Peet is rated five stars for dividend strength. GWA Group's 7.31% yield is notable but has a high payout ratio at 90.6%, raising sustainability concerns. Cedar Woods shows a low payout ratio of 37.7%, indicating better coverage, though its dividend history is volatile. These stocks highlight a mix of yield and risk in Australia's dividend landscape as investors seek stable returns amid global uncertainty.

Latest articles

ERock Falls in NYSE Debut, AI Power Firm Starts Trading Below IPO Price

ERock Falls in NYSE Debut, AI Power Firm Starts Trading Below IPO Price

10 June 2026
ERock plunged 12.37% below its $21.50 IPO price on debut as investors questioned whether its $1.28 billion AI data-center power-system backlog—$1.1 billion tied to AI projects—will convert to revenue, despite surging demand and a major Meta contract; risks flagged include customer cancellations and execution challenges, with the company posting a $17.2 million quarterly loss.
Coeur Mining Drops Even as S&P MidCap 400 Move Meets Gold Slide

Coeur Mining Drops Even as S&P MidCap 400 Move Meets Gold Slide

10 June 2026
Coeur Mining shares fell 4.23% to $15.41 despite confirmation it will join the S&P MidCap 400 on June 22, as plunging gold and silver prices outweighed the usual index-inclusion boost; gold sales made up 56% of Q1 revenue and silver 42%, leaving future cash flow highly sensitive to metals prices.
Netflix Up Slightly as Wall Street Looks for Next Leg Higher

Netflix Up Slightly as Wall Street Looks for Next Leg Higher

10 June 2026
Netflix stock edged up 0.9% to $82.13 even after Jefferies cut its price target to $110, as investors weigh a new Asia-Pacific mobile product rollout against concerns over near-term catalysts, Q2 margin guidance, and rising competition from short-form video platforms.
Markets brace for Monday after U.S. strike on Venezuela: oil, stocks and safe-haven demand in focus
Previous Story

Markets brace for Monday after U.S. strike on Venezuela: oil, stocks and safe-haven demand in focus

Quantum computing stocks surge to start 2026: D-Wave, Rigetti, IonQ lead — what investors watch next
Next Story

Quantum computing stocks surge to start 2026: D-Wave, Rigetti, IonQ lead — what investors watch next

Go toTop