Today: 4 June 2026
Palantir’s $1.1 Billion Test: Swiss Bank Defends Stake as AI Contractor Wins New U.S. Work
24 April 2026
2 mins read

Palantir’s $1.1 Billion Test: Swiss Bank Defends Stake as AI Contractor Wins New U.S. Work

BERN, April 24, 2026, 13:57 (CEST)

Swiss National Bank Chairman Martin Schlegel on Friday stood by the central bank’s investment strategy, responding after campaigners in Minneapolis called for the SNB to dump its $1.1 billion holding in Palantir Technologies Inc.—a fresh push against the U.S. software firm’s government contracts. According to Reuters, the SNB owned 6.24 million shares of Palantir at the close of 2025, part of its wider foreign-currency reserves.

Pressure comes to the forefront as Palantir ramps up its public-sector ambitions, with investors still weighing if its artificial intelligence—software for navigating sprawling data—can keep the engine running. This week, Palantir and the U.S. Department of Agriculture rolled out a $300 million Blanket Purchase Agreement, a government contract setup that streamlines agency orders. The deal backs farm-security and service-delivery systems.

Palantir shares swung lower on Thursday, ending the session at $141.57, a drop of 7.24%. That came right after a 4.56% gain the previous day. Early Friday, Investing.com data pointed to the stock trading higher in the premarket hours, ahead of the U.S. open.

Minneapolis delegates linked their appeal to Palantir’s contracts with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or ICE, and renewed criticism that followed deadly encounters between immigration authorities and Minneapolis residents in January. Janette Corcelius, part of the group, labeled Palantir “a threat to our democracy.” Palantir stayed silent when asked for comment, according to Reuters; earlier, CEO Alex Karp defended the company’s controls, insisting its tools reveal “only what ought to be seen” to government users. Reuters

Schlegel made it clear the SNB isn’t hand-picking stocks—company weights are tied to market value, a move aimed at spreading out risk. Firms found violating key human rights or core Swiss principles, he said, don’t make the cut. As for the screening? He called it “very robust.” Reuters

Palantir’s proxy, filed Friday, put the spotlight on a familiar debate. Coming up June 3, shareholders face votes on two proposals: one calls for an independent due-diligence report, the other asks for a Human Rights Impact Assessment—a look at how Palantir products impact human rights in practice and in theory. The board wants both voted down, arguing the proposals misunderstand the situation and offer nothing shareholders don’t already know.

The federal pipeline keeps growing. Palantir says its new USDA contract will back the National Farm Security Action Plan and “One Farmer, One File”—aimed at making it easier for farmers to use USDA services. “America depends on its farmers,” Ali Monfre, Palantir’s federal engineering lead, said. USDA Chief Information Officer Sam Berry put it more bluntly: “Protecting America’s farmland is protecting America itself.” Business Wire

The farm deal lands as data risks swirl. This week, American Oversight sued multiple federal agencies over Palantir’s surveillance and personal data analysis systems, FedScoop reported. Palantir executive Lauren Penneys, in comments to the outlet, said the USDA project is a “USDA-specific effort”—not a case of cross-department data sharing. FedScoop

The bulls aren’t backing down on Wall Street. Rosenblatt stuck with its buy rating and $200 target for Palantir, citing business momentum stretching from Q4 through the first half of 2026. Still, the same note flagged that InvestingPro’s fair-value assessment pegs the stock as overvalued.

Defense is the bigger story here. Just last month, Reuters said the Pentagon is moving to make Palantir’s Maven a formal program of record—a move that could lock in longer-term funding. Maven, for reference, is a command-and-control platform that sifts through battlefield data and can flag targets. On missile defense, Palantir shares the field: Reuters also reported both Palantir and Anduril are building software for the Golden Dome project, with Scale AI contributing as well.

Palantir’s challenge has shifted: landing big government deals is only half the story now. The company has to weigh whether the growth from those contracts outpaces the scrutiny that inevitably follows when its software ends up in public-sector hands.

Stock Market Today

  • American Express Stock Seen as Undervalued After Year-to-Date Pullback
    June 4, 2026, 11:09 AM EDT. American Express (AXP) shares recently closed at $300.57, down 19.4% year to date but still up 2.6% over the past year. The stock's pullback reflects shifting investor sentiment on interest rates, credit quality, and spending trends. A financial model called Excess Returns, which assesses profits above shareholders' required returns, values AXP at $404.67 per share-25.7% above the current price-indicating it is undervalued. This suggests potential value in AXP after the recent drop. Investors track payment volumes and card activity as indicators of economic health, while valuation methods such as price-to-earnings ratios provide additional perspectives. Analysts emphasize monitoring these fundamentals amid evolving market conditions for the Consumer Finance sector.

Latest articles

CXApp Stock Rockets After Tiny AI Firm Buys EngineRoom—The 75% Move Explained

CXApp Stock Rockets After Tiny AI Firm Buys EngineRoom—The 75% Move Explained

4 June 2026
CXApp shares soared about 75% in heavy Nasdaq trading after announcing its $4.6 million EngineRoom acquisition, expected to boost annualized revenue run-rate to over $12 million from $4 million; a June 3 filing also revealed CXApp issued 12.3 million shares to Avondale Capital, raising dilution concerns for investors.
Micron Drops as AI Memory Stocks Take a Hit

Micron Drops as AI Memory Stocks Take a Hit

4 June 2026
Micron Technology plunged 8.3% to $989.46 after a chip-sector selloff triggered by Broadcom’s revenue miss, but analysts say the memory-chip shortage could last years, with Morgan Stanley raising its target to $1,050; risks remain as Raymond James warns DRAM and NAND prices may peak mid-2026, and supply chain groups caution AI data centers are straining chip availability.
Quantinuum starts $1.68B Nasdaq debut, quantum stocks watch

Quantinuum starts $1.68B Nasdaq debut, quantum stocks watch

4 June 2026
Quantinuum raised $1.68 billion in a Nasdaq IPO at $60 per share—above its marketed range—giving investors access to a Honeywell-backed quantum computing pure-play as the U.S. government pledges $2 billion in quantum incentives, but the company posted a $192.6 million net loss on $30.9 million revenue in 2025 and remains reliant on a few customers, with Honeywell retaining about 48.1% ownership after the offering.
Solidion Shares Surge Following Space Battery Announcement

Solidion Shares Surge Following Space Battery Announcement

4 June 2026
Solidion shares soared 361% to $23.21 after unveiling a patented battery platform for satellites, AI data centers, and lunar infrastructure, despite no customer orders, limited cash of $38,887, minimal sales, a going-concern warning, and defaulted debt, making future financing and dilution key risks for investors.
UnitedHealth Shares Climb as Wall Street Sees Less Cost Pressure

UnitedHealth Shares Climb as Wall Street Sees Less Cost Pressure

4 June 2026
UnitedHealth Group surged 5.7% after Bank of America upgraded the stock to Buy and Morgan Stanley hiked its price target, as Wall Street cited signs of easing medical costs and a favorable second-quarter earnings setup, with shares trading near $398 and the board boosting the quarterly dividend to $2.32, even as a Massachusetts lawsuit poses ongoing risk.
Skillz Stock’s $420 Million Papaya Verdict Rally Faces a Fast Reality Check
Previous Story

Skillz Stock’s $420 Million Papaya Verdict Rally Faces a Fast Reality Check

IREN Stock Faces May 7 Test as AI Data Center Pivot, Microsoft Deal and $6 Billion Share-Sale Risk Collide
Next Story

IREN Stock Faces May 7 Test as AI Data Center Pivot, Microsoft Deal and $6 Billion Share-Sale Risk Collide

Go toTop