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The weirdest, best, and most unhinged quotes from Palantir’s Q4 earnings call

“This is a revolution. Some people can get their heads cut off.”

Gone are the days when earnings calls meant constant repetitions of “great quarter guys,” sanitized compliance-approved answers, and language more hedged than an English country garden.

In the meme stock era, company execs are ditching the dull in favor of the daring — and Palantir Technologies, which went parabolic on robust earnings yesterday evening, is the perfect example. Here are the best and strangest comments from PLTR’s Q4 earnings call (bolding and emphasis in any direct quotes is our own).

Palantir Q4 earnings remarks

After a lengthy disclaimer from someone on the finance team, Ryan Taylor, the company’s chief revenue officer and chief legal officer — yes, those roles are apparently done by one person at Palantir began the call by touting the company’s exceptional Q4 results, including an extraordinary top line beat and outperformance led by our US business.

He went on to espouse the many benefits of the “AI revolution,” reminding listeners at all times that Palantir is at the very heart of things, which is why its various businesses, particularly in the US, are seeing such strong growth.

Eventually, Taylor ceded the spotlight to Shyam Sankar, Palantir’s chief technology officer, who didn’t mince words on how they felt about large language models:

For the last two years, weve been saying that even while the LLMs are improving, the models across both open and closed source are becoming more similar and performance will converge, all while the cost per token for inference continues to drop substantially. And thats because the markets been focused on AI supply, the models.

With the release of DeepSeek-R1, that has gone from a contrarian position to consensus. Its now blindingly obvious to everyone. Our foundational investments in Ontology and infrastructure have positioned us to uniquely deliver on AI demand.

From the beginning, AIP [Palantir’s Artificial Intelligence Platform] was built for this reality. Chat was always a dead end.

Sankar revealed some impressive case study results: Weve been working with a large multinational bank to automate core back-office processes. What used to take five days now takes three minutes.

He went on to add, The before and after with AI is stark and the speed of implementation is accelerating. You can divide companies up into two categories: the quick and the dead.Luckily for Palantir, one of its manufacturing products, Warp Speed, is moving very fast. Turning to Warp Speed, Palantirs modern American manufacturing operating system, it continues to move at warp factor 10.

David Glazer, the company’s chief financial officer, kept his remarks pretty straightforward, with lots of numbers, while Alex Karp, Palantir’s cofounder and CEO, wasn’t afraid to pontificate on a huge range of subjects. He started by saying, Welcome to our Palantir revolution, otherwise known as our earnings call.

He reiterated just how forward-looking Palantir is. The part of the reason weve done so well is experts look to the past as an indication of the future, and were looking to the future as an indication of the present.In fact, Palantir is at the forefront of civil liberties, if it does say so itself: We have rejected all the way through anti-meritocratic concepts, anti-transparent concepts. Were at the forefront of civil liberties.

Karp also talked up Palantir’s role within the country’s military-industrial complex:

“Last not least, we believe we are making America more lethal, making our adversaries increasingly afraid of acting against the interest of America and especially Americans. And we are proud of our moral stance, and we are very long on the US and whats happening and what will happen in the future.

And, of course, the vibes at Palantir, even within its products, are immense right now:

One of the things thats crazy important about our time at Palantir now is its actually the vibe internally, the vibe with our clients, the vibe with – inside of our products is we are at the way beginning of our trajectory. We are at the way beginning of revolution. And we plan to be a cornerstone, if not the cornerstone company and driving this revolution in the US over the next three to five years. Thank you.

Palantir Q4 earnings Q&A

In response to a question on DeepSeek-R1, CTO Shyam Sankar really took the opportunity to zoom out on US-China relations:

But this war started long ago. It was an economic war with the ascension of China to the World Trade Organization, the greatest IP theft in history, the greatest wealth transfer in history. It is an opium war. The number one cause of deaths of 18- to 45-year-olds in this country is fentanyl.

When questioned about the potential opportunity to improve the efficiency of the US government, Sankar said, Palantirs real competition is a lack of accountability in government. These forever software projects that cost an insane amount, that dont actually deliver results — theyre sacred cows of the deep state.

Karp, meanwhile, was at it again with the revolution stuff:

We love disruption and whatever is good for America will be good for Americans and very good for Palantir. And I think youve got it exactly right. Disruption, at the end of the day, exposes things that arent working. Therell be ups and down. This is a revolution. Some people can get their heads cut off.

He also found time to lend a handy analogy on how he once felt about partnership meetings. It used to be partnership meetings were complete waste of time and BS,” he said, like largely so people could fill out a report that they met with us kind of thing, like high school dating for nerds.

One of the CEO’s responses even brought up an old philosophical stumper — if every individual Palantirian is unique, what does that mean for the concept of uniqueness?

“Every single Palantirian is special,” Karp said. Everyone here is doing something unique.

When offered the opportunity to send out a message to individual investors, Karp once again turned his attention to Palantir’s role as an agent of violent disruption within the industry: Palantir is here to disrupt and make our — the institutions we partner with the very best in the world and, when its necessary, to scare enemies and on occasion, kill them.

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OpenAI commits up to $25 billion for 500-megawatt “Stargate Argentina” data center

OpenAI has reportedly signed a letter of intent to invest up to $25 billion on “Stargate Argentina,” a new 500-megawatt AI data center.

Reuters reports that the deal would involve tax incentives.

In a video announcing the project, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said:

“Our vision for Stargate Argentina is to deliver a major boost to the country’s AI infrastructure, creating a foundation for new capabilities from smarter public services to tools that help small businesses compete globally.

OpenAI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

You may remember the name “Stargate” from the megaproject that tech giants and the Trump administration announced earlier this year to build a huge number of data centers in the US. And you may remember Argentina as the nation the Trump administration is now bailing out with a $20 billion currency swap.

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Jon Keegan

Meta considering a stand-alone TV app as it leans into Instagram videos

Meta is considering building a dedicated TV app to expand the reach of Instagram’s video content, according to comments by Adam Mosseri, head of Instagram, at a Bloomberg conference.

Instagram has 3 billion monthly users and is leaning into its Reels vertical videos, which puts it head-to-head with TikTok. Mosseri told Bloomberg:

“If behavior [and] the consumption of these platforms is moving to TV, then we need to move to TV, too.”

A move to living room screens could let Meta compete against Alphabet’s YouTube, but adapting vertical videos to TV could prove challenging.

“If behavior [and] the consumption of these platforms is moving to TV, then we need to move to TV, too.”

A move to living room screens could let Meta compete against Alphabet’s YouTube, but adapting vertical videos to TV could prove challenging.

tech
Jon Keegan

Nvidia backs Reflection AI in $2 billion fundraising round

When DeepSeek R1 was released at the end of last year, it shook the AI world to its core.

The scrappy Chinese startup developed a competitive open-weights reasoning model that bested several state-of-the-art models from OpenAI and Google in several benchmarks.

The release caused the industry to question its bet on massive AI infrastructure over clever engineering done with constrained resources.

American startup Reflection AI thinks the West needs its own DeepSeek, and plans on being the company to build it.

On Thursday, Reflection AI announced it had raised $2 billion at an $8 billion valuation, with Nvidia leading the fundraising round with an $800 million investment.

Reflection does not appear to have developed a frontier-scale model yet, but has built the software needed to train one. A $2 billion cash infusion will certainly help with the company’s training costs, but by comparison, DeepSeek’s R1 model was trained for only $249,000.

The release caused the industry to question its bet on massive AI infrastructure over clever engineering done with constrained resources.

American startup Reflection AI thinks the West needs its own DeepSeek, and plans on being the company to build it.

On Thursday, Reflection AI announced it had raised $2 billion at an $8 billion valuation, with Nvidia leading the fundraising round with an $800 million investment.

Reflection does not appear to have developed a frontier-scale model yet, but has built the software needed to train one. A $2 billion cash infusion will certainly help with the company’s training costs, but by comparison, DeepSeek’s R1 model was trained for only $249,000.

tech
Jon Keegan

Nvidia’s Jensen Huang throws shade at OpenAI-AMD deal

In an interview on CNBC yesterday, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang threw some shade at the recently announced megadeal between competitor Advanced Micro Devices and its partner, OpenAI.

The unusual deal calls for AMD to sell multiple generations of its GPUs to OpenAI, totaling 6 gigawatts of computing power, in exchange for stock warrants for OpenAI to buy about 10% of the company.

When asked about the deal, Huang said:

“Yeah, I saw the deal. It’s imaginative, it’s unique and surprising. Considering they were so excited about their next-generation product, I’m surprised that they would give away 10% of the company before they even built it.”

The move diversifies part of OpenAI’s GPU supply chain away from Nvidia, which supplies the vast majority of GPUs for hyperscalers today.

When asked about the deal, Huang said:

“Yeah, I saw the deal. It’s imaginative, it’s unique and surprising. Considering they were so excited about their next-generation product, I’m surprised that they would give away 10% of the company before they even built it.”

The move diversifies part of OpenAI’s GPU supply chain away from Nvidia, which supplies the vast majority of GPUs for hyperscalers today.

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