Today: 3 June 2026
Innodata Stock Jumps on AI Revenue Beat: The $51 Million Big Tech Deal Driving INOD Higher

Innodata Stock Jumps on AI Revenue Beat: The $51 Million Big Tech Deal Driving INOD Higher

New York, May 8, 2026, 10:10 ET

Innodata Inc. shares leapt roughly 89% early Friday, powered by a record-setting first quarter and a boost to its 2026 growth forecast. The AI data-engineering firm now sees potential new Big Tech deals generating about $51 million in revenue for this year. INOD last changed hands at $86.31, just off an intraday high of $90.13.

The shift is drawing attention as investors look for firms translating the AI boom into tangible sales. Innodata reported first-quarter revenue of $90.1 million, up 54% year over year—fueled by stronger demand for its AI-focused data services, with growth coming from larger customer programs and fresh contracts involving increasingly complex AI workflows.

The narrative turns from a simple earnings beat to something bigger: a shift in who’s buying. CEO Jack Abuhoff said Innodata’s latest Big Tech client brought in zero revenue last year. Now, by 2026, it could be their No. 2 account. Revenue from the rest of Innodata’s Big Tech base jumped 453% for the quarter.

Innodata bumped its full-year 2026 revenue growth outlook to at least 40%, a jump from the 35% figure it issued just 10 weeks back. Quarterly revenue topped analyst projections of $76.469 million, according to Benzinga, with adjusted EPS landing at 42 cents—handily clearing the 17-cent consensus bar.

Adjusted EBITDA climbed to $25.0 million, or 28% of revenue—double the $12.7 million posted a year ago, after backing out interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and select items. Adjusted gross margin also widened, hitting 47%.

Abuhoff described the quarter as “record-setting,” noting that Innodata’s momentum in AI data and evaluation is now driving both scale and cash flow. As of March, Innodata reported $117.4 million across cash, equivalents, and short-term investments. Its $50 million credit line from Wells Fargo? Untouched. Innodata Investor Relations

Abuhoff told listeners the latest Big Tech projects cover every phase—pre-training, mid-training, post-training, and evaluation. Simply put, these are the data steps needed to build, adjust, and test large language models before deploying them in actual products.

Innodata is pushing to diversify away from its traditional labor-intensive offerings. President and Chief Revenue Officer Rahul Singhal said the company’s agent observability platform launched in beta this quarter, securing a $1 million deal with a hyperscaler. Another 15 companies are currently evaluating the product. Agentic systems—AI that handles complex, multi-step processes and adapts to feedback—are at the heart of this push.

Federal projects are part of the story, too. According to MarketBeat, Innodata management pointed to positive reactions on its Palantir computer vision work, said it’s already started with a top federal systems integrator, and highlighted a prime contract slot on the Missile Defense Agency’s SHIELD program.

There’s a caveat here. Innodata’s latest 10-Q highlights its vulnerability to customer concentration and uneven project flow: one client brought in roughly 56% of Q1 revenue, with a second contributing 17%. Abuhoff mentioned on the analyst call that projects can “start and stop.” SEC

The company cautioned that contracts could be ended, projected volumes might fall short, and depending on project work means revenue takes a hit if clients push back, slim down, or drop programs. That’s the backdrop for Friday’s repricing—a solid quarter, but the business remains at the mercy of shifting AI budgets.

Innodata is moving to a single operating segment, ditching its former DDS, Agility, and Synodex divisions. The shift, the company says, lines up with its growing focus on AI and integrated delivery. The spotlight now turns to the $51 million customer ramp and recent platform efforts—investors are watching to see if these can ease customer concentration without erasing the margin improvement that’s fueled the stock’s recent surge.

Latest articles

Snap Lags Nasdaq, Turnaround Pressure Rises

Snap Lags Nasdaq, Turnaround Pressure Rises

3 June 2026
Snap Inc. shares slid 1.5% to $5.76 Tuesday—about 45% below last July’s high—even as the broader market rose, spotlighting investor doubts about Snap’s turnaround despite first-quarter revenue growth, narrowed losses, and major cost cuts; ad growth remains sluggish and the upcoming Specs update on June 16 is seen as a key test for future revenue momentum.
INFQ back on radar after UK quantum push; shares jump

INFQ back on radar after UK quantum push; shares jump

3 June 2026
Infleqtion shares surged 12.4% to $19.87 in late New York trading after announcing Gold Sponsorship of Quantum Fringe 2026 and new U.K. quantum partnerships, as investors bet on government contracts and expanded manufacturing, despite a $30.3 million quarterly net loss and warnings of ongoing operating losses if public-sector funding slows.
Corning shares move after AI news

Corning shares move after AI news

3 June 2026
Corning soared 13.4% to $200.40 on heavy volume after Nvidia’s CEO spotlighted the need for optical links in AI data centers, with Corning’s recent Nvidia and Meta deals making it a top play on AI infrastructure; first-quarter core sales jumped 18% and optical sales surged 36%, but investors face risks from consumer electronics demand and execution on new factory expansions.
Quantum computing stocks face a holiday week after IonQ stake filing and a Rigetti downgrade

IonQ Stock Jumped Again. A Giant Quantum IPO Is Putting the Trade on Trial

3 June 2026
IonQ shares closed up 3.1% at $71.40 before slipping 1.3% after hours as traders positioned ahead of Quantinuum’s upsized IPO, which seeks up to $1.46 billion at a $14.3 billion valuation; IonQ’s Q1 revenue surged 755% to $64.7 million with a raised 2026 outlook, but a $271.5 million operating loss and guidance for continued high expenses highlight risks as Wall Street awaits new sector benchmarks.
Xos Surges After Hours as Data-Center Power Play Hits Tape

Xos Surges After Hours as Data-Center Power Play Hits Tape

3 June 2026
Xos shares soared 135.8% to $5.26 in after-hours trading after launching a 2.5MWh Power Hub for data centers facing grid delays, but the company warned of "substantial doubt" about its ability to continue as a going concern, with just $9.8 million in cash at March 31 and no large orders yet announced for the new product.
HawkEye 360 Stock Jumps 30% After $416 Million IPO as Defense-Space Demand Builds
Previous Story

HawkEye 360 Stock Jumps 30% After $416 Million IPO as Defense-Space Demand Builds

Samsara Stock Slips as Its AI Data-Moat Story Faces a June Earnings Test
Next Story

Samsara Stock Slips as Its AI Data-Moat Story Faces a June Earnings Test

Go toTop