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Just For You
Palantir's CEO Just Called Out OpenAI and AnthropicReported by Chris Markoch. Article Published: 7/7/2026. 
Key Points
- CEO Alex Karp told CNBC that enterprises risk losing their competitive data advantage by relying on frontier AI models like OpenAI or Anthropic.
- Critics, including Michael Burry, argue Karp is talking his book amid PLTR's 25% decline in 2026, but Palantir's earnings have not shown lost business.
- Karp projected $15 billion to $18 billion in free cash flow within two years, though PLTR still trades below its 200-day EMA of $143.43.
- Special Report: Forget SpaceX. Buy the company Musk can't replace.
Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) is not known to shy away from controversial topics. However, when it comes to frontier large language models (e.g., Anthropic and OpenAI), Palantir had been pulling its punches. That changed in a recent CNBC interview with Palantir co-founder and CEO Alex Karp. In it, Karp said something the company’s business model has been suggesting for years: the real AI trade isn't the foundation model layer; it's the application and integration layer that sits on top of it.
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Karp remarked that enterprises want to "own the means of production" instead of "transferring their alpha" to OpenAI or Anthropic. In plain English, Karp was warning that an enterprise's competitive edge (i.e., its alpha) is its data. If that data runs through another company’s API, they are renting a moat, not building one. The real danger comes if those companies use the data they acquire to work against the enterprises with which they’re doing business. According to Karp, that is not a concern with Palantir. How Frontier AI Models Could Become Enterprise CompetitorsWhen an enterprise company pays a frontier model company, they’re buying the opportunity to bolt, in industry terms, a chatbot onto their workflow. The value and pricing power flow to the model maker. In the process, the enterprise loses exclusive ownership of that data. With Palantir, a company is buying Ontology/AIP to embed AI directly into its own proprietary data and decision-making. The value of that data stays in-house. The threat Karp is describing isn't hypothetical. Enterprises that route their proprietary data through a frontier model risk handing over their know-how, trade secrets, and competitive edge to a company that may eventually compete with them directly. That risk is becoming harder to ignore. For an enterprise, real data safety means maintaining control over its own data, model weights, and compute resources. Without that control, a frontier lab can absorb a company's proprietary knowledge and repurpose it into its own product. Anthropic's expansion into vertical-specific offerings illustrates the pattern. Categories once served by independent developers building on top of Anthropic's models are increasingly being served by Anthropic itself. The model maker sees where value is created on top of its platform, then moves in to capture it directly. The logic is straightforward: a company with a dominant model can use that position to expand into adjacent, high-value verticals over time. It's the same dynamic Karp is pointing out. If enterprises hand over proprietary data, they may be arming their own future competitor. Is Alex Karp Defending Palantir or Highlighting a Real AI Risk?Critics of Karp’s statement say he is simply talking his book. Some investors have viewed frontier models as a direct threat to Palantir’s business. Michael Burry went so far as to say that Anthropic was “eating Palantir’s lunch.” The criticism has gained more traction with PLTR down 25% in 2026 and approximately 35% from its all-time closing high around $207 in November 2025. The thinking is that Karp is trying to prop up the stock by discrediting the competition. However, the crux of Karp’s argument is consistent with what many analysts have been saying for months. Palantir operates at a different layer of the AI stack. Its role is to orchestrate the application layer via its Ontology, which is agnostic to whichever large language model (LLM) enterprises choose to use. A more relevant critique is that foundation model companies are moving downstream too (custom GPTs, enterprise tooling), so the "layer" distinction may blur over time. However, Palantir’s earnings reports to date don’t indicate that the company is losing business. In fact, the opposite appears to be true. Can Palantir's Long-Term Growth Outlook Justify PLTR's Valuation?Palantir will continue to face concerns about its valuation. No matter how much the company grows, many investors believe that there’s too much future growth priced into PLTR. So far, betting against that future growth hasn’t been a good bet. But what comes next? According to Karp in the interview, Palantir has “...more business than we can supply. [...] 2 years out, you can see 15 ... 18 billion dollars of free cashflow.” That will fire up the skeptics. However, in 2022, Karp announced a 2025 revenue target of $4.5 billion. In 2025, the company’s full-year revenue was $4.475 billion. Like it or not, Karp has a history of backing up forecasts that first look audacious. That makes the case for owning PLTR for the long haul. However, in the near term, PLTR's chart tells a story of stalled momentum, not a full recovery. The stock still trades below its 200-day EMA of $143.43. That’s a level that continues to cap upside as resistance. 
There are signs of stabilization: the MACD has turned positive after months in negative territory, signaling early bullish momentum following the June lows near $106. But until PLTR reclaims its 200-day EMA, the longer-term trend remains bearish. Karp's comments may be fueling sentiment, but the chart shows a stock still searching for confirmation. |