Wall Street wrote off the stock as too expensive. Retail investors can’t get enough

Wall Street wrote off the stock as too expensive. Retail investors can’t get enough

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Kyle Dijamco is a proud member of Palantir Technologies‘ fast-growing retail investor base.

The Los Angeles-based marketer has bet big on the defense tech stock, even increasing his exposure after a drawdown earlier this year. The 31-year-old’s position now stands at roughly $25,000.

“It’s an exciting stock to own,” Dijamco told CNBC.

Dijamco is part of an army of mom-and-pop traders who have poured billions of dollars into the Denver-based company’s shares in 2025, according to data from VandaTrack. Its monster gains over recent years amid the artificial intelligence boom has made the stock an indisputable star of the retail investing world, in spite of Wall Street’s reservations about valuation.

Individual investors were on track to buy nearly $8 billion in Palantir stock on balance in 2025, per Vanda data as of Dec. 8. That is a gain of more than 80% over the prior year, and it reflects an increase of over 400% from 2023.

Palantir is on pace to be the fifth-most bought security on balance for the year, Vanda data shows. The stock sits behind only megacap names like Tesla and Nvidia and popular exchange-traded funds such as the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY), which tracks the entire U.S. market benchmark.

“It’s been great,” said Viraj Patel, deputy head of research at Vanda, which tracks retail trader flows. ​​”Palantir has kind of been brought into this group of AI-tech poster [children].”

An ‘insane’ business

Palantir has won the hearts of retail investors amid its takeoff as a stock. Its shares have surged more than 150% so far in 2025, placing the name on track for its third straight year with triple-digit gains.

The stock has skyrocketed nearly 3,000% in the last three years, crushing the S&P 500‘s roughly 80% gain and the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite‘s more than 120% climb in the same time frame.

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Palantir vs. the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite, 1-year chart

The logo of U.S. software company Palantir Technologies is seen in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 22, 2020.

Arnd Wiegmann | Reuters

The San Diego resident said he picked up more shares following the company’s third-quarter earnings report in early November. Palantir tanked 16% that month as investors dumped their AI plays on valuation fears, and the stock posted its worst monthly performance in more than two years.

Wall Street largely chalked up the sell-off to profit-taking and broader concerns about the health of the AI trade. Vanda found the bulk of Palantir’s retail buying took place in the first nine months of the year, then cooled off as growing fears of an AI bubble left investors questioning the trade.

A retail ‘romance’

Big money’s hesitancy

Alex Karp, chief executive officer of Palantir Technologies Inc., speaks during the AIPCon conference in Palo Alto, California, US, on March 13, 2025.

David Paul Morris | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Luria said Palantir also draws parallels to Tesla’s stock 10 years ago, when the carmaker was presenting an electric vehicle-focused future. Tesla shares have soared about 3,000% in the past decade, while the S&P 500 has gained more than 230% in the same period.

The question, Luria said, is if the retail crowd who backed Tesla a decade ago are right once again about Palantir.

The analyst said Palantir’s earnings results have been largely strong over the last several years. Palantir’s second-quarter report in August — in which the company topped the Street’s estimates and raised its full-year guidance due to the AI boom — left him questioning if the stock is worth jumping into despite the lofty multiple.

“Even us most jaded, old, stodgy Wall Street analysts were taken aback by the level of success,” Luria said. “It was such a staggering success that I had to reconsider everything I knew.”

Scion Asset Management — the now-de-registered fund run by “The Big Short” investor Michael Burry — revealed bets against Palantir and fellow AI darling Nvidia in the third quarter. Karp told CNBC that Burry’s move was “bats— crazy.”

Alex Karp on 'Big Short' investor Michael Burry: 'Bats--- crazy' for bets against Palantir, Nvidia

Overvaluation or destiny?

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