Renowned “Big Short” investor Michael Burry made a dire prediction about Palantir stock. I think he’s dead wrong

Michael Burry is a legend in the investing community. He made a name for himself by being among the first to predict the collapse of the subprime lending market in 2008. His high-stakes bets made a real fortune, netting him $100 million personally and $725 million for his investors. The film that presented these events, The Great Shorthas become must-see in the Wall Street set. So when Burry talks, investors tend to listen.

The famous investor recently made a rather dire prediction regarding the Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR). In a 10,000-word manifesto posted last week, Burry laid out his bearish case against the artificial intelligence (AI) and data mining specialist. He listed several possible scenarios, leading to results ranging from $21 to $146 per share. He went on to suggest that the most likely scenario is that the stock has a fair value of $46 per share, or 65% below current levels. “I think Palantir’s recent winning streak won’t last,” says Burry.

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With all due respect, I think he was wrong.

Image source: Getty Images.

Burry spends much of his analysis digging into Palantir’s past, focusing on the fact that the company has been unprofitable for much of the past two decades. He points out that many of Palantir’s sales have been one-off, generating no additional or recurring revenue.

Another point of contention has been Palantir’s heavy spending and significant losses, which have plagued the company for much of its history. Bury also took issue with how the company accounted for its previously deployed engineers and with the inclusion of certain costs in Palantir’s research and development expenses. He also cited “huge stock-based compensation” compared to what he describes as “remarkably few dollars in revenue.”

While these points provide an interesting history lesson, Palantir’s current results provide a compelling rebuttal.

Palantir’s recent results paint a picture of a company firing on all cylinders. In the fourth quarter, revenue of $1.4 billion was up 70% year-over-year and 19% quarter-on-quarter. It marked the 10th consecutive quarter of accelerating revenue growth. This caused adjusted earnings per share (EPS) to jump 79% to $0.25. However, these impressive numbers tell only part of the story.

Palantir’s US government segment revenue rose 66% year-over-year to $570 million. However, the headliner was the US commercial segment, which grew 137% to $507 million.

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