Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) is pushing higher on Tuesday after a senior Truist analyst, Arvind Ramnani, said it was the “best-in-class” AI asset for 2026.
According to him, the Denver-headquartered firm is “ideally” positioned to benefit from increased AI adoption that, he believes, could push its share price up to $223 by the end of this year.
On the flip side, however, a strong case can be made that “risk-reward” in Palantir stock is actually skewed negatively, and valuation isn’t perhaps the only concern for investors over the long term.
The scalability problem may eventually come to haunt Palantir stock
Truist issued a bullish note in Palantir’s favour today, primarily because it sees it as an “operating system” for AI – but a critic would argue that Palantir is actually a high-end service provider.
It’s reasonable to assume that “Agentic AI” will eventually become a standard feature in existing platforms like Azure and Salesforce.
If these giants end up integrating similar decision-making agents directly into their clouds, PLTR’s specialised software may become a luxury rather than a necessity.
Moreover, Palantir’s model often relies on “forward-deployed engineers” to help clients implement its complex systems.
This makes PLTR stock less like a scalable software name and more like a high-margin consultancy (like Accenture) – which should command a much lower earnings multiple than its current 224x.
PLTR shares could sink as expansion proves more difficult than expected
Truist sees international expansion as a “buy” signal, but skeptics point to the difficulty of selling high-level surveillance and data software to foreign governments.
This is especially true for Europe, where data sovereignty laws are strict and domestic competitors are preferred.
Additionally, Palantir’s artificial intelligence platform (AIP) is proprietary and closed, lacking the open developer ecosystem that fuels innovation in platforms like OpenAI and Google Cloud Vertex AI.
It’s not a general-purpose AI infrastructure provider – it’s more of a verticalised analytics tool with artificial intelligence wrappers.
Therefore, if AI adoption shifts toward open-source, modular, or cloud-native platforms, Palantir’s shares could be left behind.
How to play Palantir Technologies at current levels
While Palantir has carved out a niche in AI-driven analytics, calling it “best-in-class” overlooks its limited scale, closed ecosystem, and valuation risk.
True artificial intelligence leaders are building extensible platforms that empower developers and enterprises alike. Palantir – by contrast – remains a specialised tool with uncertain scalability.
It may not be an “operating system” for AI, but a black box that’s difficult and costly to deploy.
The Nasdaq-listed firm sure is growing at an exceptional pace.
But that growth may be more than priced in already at a forward multiple of more than 200, which has historically been unsustainable.
Note that other Wall Street firms do not necessarily agree with Truist either.
The consensus rating on PLTR shares currently sits at “hold” with the mean target of $191 signaling potential upside of about 6% only.
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