Morgan Stanley just published a deep-dive note on Palantir Technologies (PLTR), and the message for investors is more nuanced than the rating suggests. The firm is not bullish enough to upgrade. But it is more bullish than it was. That gap is exactly what investors need to understand.
Analysts Sanjit Singh, Keith Weiss, and Oscar Saavedra maintain their equal-weight rating and $205 price target on PLTR. With shares closing at $155.68 on March 19, that target represents roughly 30% upside.
And yet the firm is holding back. The reason comes down to one number: 64.
The valuation problem Morgan Stanley cannot ignore
Palantir (PLTR) is currently trading at 64 times its 2027 free cash flow estimate and 38 times 2027 sales. Those are not typos. They reflect a market that has already priced in years of flawless execution.
The company delivered in Q4. Revenue grew 70% year over year, marking 10 consecutive quarters of accelerating growth. Management issued fiscal year 2026 revenue guidance of 61% growth, with operating margins expanding to 57.5%. By almost any measure, those are exceptional results. And yet shares barely moved after earnings.
That reaction tells investors something important. Morgan Stanley notes that even stronger estimate outperformance may be needed for shares to move materially higher in the near term. Blockbuster quarters are already expected. Anything short of that risks multiple contraction.
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Morgan Stanley’s own long-term model is constructive. The firm projects earnings per share growing from $0.75 in 2025 to $1.92 by 2027, with revenue compounding at a 39% five-year rate through 2030 and operating margins reaching 68%.
The bull case is real. The question is whether any of that future value is still available to investors at today’s price.
Why the firm is getting more confident anyway
Despite the valuation concern, Morgan Stanley says its early field checks point to sustained momentum in the U.S., and that it is growing in optimism that Foundry will emerge as one of the dominant platforms in enterprise software. That is a meaningful shift in tone for a firm that has held its equal-weight rating since February 2025.
The source of that growing confidence is Palantir’s Ontology, the technology that sits at the core of everything the company builds. Understanding it matters for investors because it is the reason Morgan Stanley believes Palantir’s competitive advantage is harder to replicate than the market assumes.
Ontology is a live digital map of a customer’s entire business. It unifies data from every system a company runs into a single real-time model that employees and AI agents can act on. Once built, every new application and workflow runs on top of it. Replacing it means rebuilding the entire operational foundation from scratch. That is structural lock-in, not ordinary switching cost.
What Morgan Stanley says about the moat
The firm spoke with former forward deployed engineers, the specialists Palantir embeds inside customer organizations for months at a time to build these systems.
Their conclusion is direct: Building a high-quality Ontology cannot be automated or purchased off the shelf. It requires deep, organization-specific domain knowledge captured over a lengthy period of hands-on engagement.
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Morgan Stanley argues that Palantir’s more than 20 years of deployments inside demanding environments, including U.S. intelligence agencies, the Department of Defense, and NATO allies, have produced an institutional knowledge base that competitors would need years to replicate.
Snowflake (SNOW) and Databricks are strong in data storage and analytics. Neither offers what Palantir does at the level of operational decision-making and governed AI action.
What would it take for Morgan Stanley to upgrade?
- Sustained top-line and bottom-line beats, not just one or two strong quarters
- Field checks confirming the Ontology deployment flywheel is accelerating
- Evidence that U.S. commercial momentum is durable, not deal-cycle driven
What this means for investors watching PLTR
Morgan Stanley’s $205 target is based on 55 times its 2030 free cash flow estimate of $15.5 billion, discounted back at a 13% cost of capital. That math works if Palantir continues to execute at the pace it has set.
It does not work if growth decelerates, margins disappoint, or the broader enterprise AI spending environment cools.
The firm flags two specific downside risks.
- First, Palantir’s reliance on large deals with a relatively small number of customers creates the potential for uneven financial performance.
- Second, if margin expansion slows, it reignites the long-running investor debate about whether Palantir is a software company or a consulting firm.
That debate is not resolved, and it carries meaningful implications for how the stock should be valued.
For investors already holding PLTR, the Morgan Stanley note is cautiously encouraging. The moat argument is strengthening. The firm’s conviction is building. But the stock is priced for everything to go right, and Morgan Stanley is not yet willing to say it will.
The next test comes on May 11, when Palantir reports first-quarter 2026 results. If the 61% growth guidance holds and margins stay on track, the upgrade conversation gets louder.
If there is any stumble, 64 times free cash flow is a very long way to fall.
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