Palantir goes public after 17-year wait - Los Angeles Times
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Palantir goes public after 17-year wait

Palantir CEO Alex Karp is shown at the 48th Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos in 2018.
(KLAUNZE/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock / KLAUNZE/EPA-EFE/REX/Shutterstock)
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Palantir Technologies Inc. began trading Wednesday as a public company, ending a 17-year tradition of secrecy surrounding the software business co-founded by Peter Thiel.

The data analytics company opened at $10 a share on the New York Stock Exchange, above the reference price of $7.25 that was set for the stock, and closed at $9.50. Palantir listed its shares directly on the exchange, rather than raising capital through an initial public offering.

Palantir rose about 10% to a market value of $18 billion after the first trades. Private investors had given Palantir a valuation of $20 billion since at least 2015.

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Companies are racing to go public in the U.S., where investors are welcoming new stocks ahead of a presidential election likely to drive volatility. Companies raised $61 billion from initial public offerings of stock this quarter, the busiest on record, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Software businesses were at the forefront of the listing boom, with Snowflake Inc. posting the biggest first-day pop in over a decade this month when it raised $3.9 billion.

Wednesday was a particularly active day for direct listings, an unconventional mechanism for taking a company public. Asana Inc., another software company backed by Thiel’s venture capital firm Founders Fund, began trading at $27.

Palantir traveled a long and sometimes rough road to its public debut. Thiel helped start the company in 2003 with early funding from an arm of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, but Palantir’s darling status among U.S. government agencies didn’t translate into success with businesses for well over a decade.

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Named for the all-seeing stones in the fictional “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, Palantir combines myriad, ever-changing data streams into one centralized “source of truth.” Customers, including the U.S. Defense Department and pharmaceutical giant Merck, then mine that information and analyze it to make decisions. The results are presented as a series of spiderweb-like visuals, making information accessible to nontechnical users.

For years, Palantir operated much like a consulting firm, dispatching its engineers to customer sites to implement the software and build one-off applications. The model was expensive, and Palantir incurred heavy losses for most of its history. The business remains unprofitable.

When Palantir built a new software platform, Foundry, in 2016, the company cut costs by automating much of the grunt work and said it reduced time to set up customers from months to days. Palantir expects to deliver an adjusted profit this year on more than $1 billion in revenue.

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Competition for global customers will be fierce. Palantir only began building a sales team in 2019. The company currently has about 125 customers, with the U.S. Army being the largest and representing 15% of revenue.

Palantir’s chairman, Thiel, and its work for government agencies including U.S. immigration have sparked concerns among corporate watchdogs and human-rights groups including Amnesty International. The company has also drawn rebukes from governance experts who point out that Thiel will have power with little accountability because of multi-class stock that grants him outsized power in perpetuity.

Palantir followed other tech companies in its decision to bypass a traditional IPO. Slack Technologies Inc. and Spotify Technology went public through direct listings in recent years, allowing employees and other shareholders to sell stock without issuing new shares to raise capital. Each company’s stock soared, with Slack and Spotify ending the first day of trading at valuations of $19.5 billion and $27.8 billion, respectively.

Bloomberg writer Crystal Tse contributed to this report.

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