Yazılar

Trimble Surpasses Q1 Revenue Estimates on Strong Product Demand Across Key Sectors

Trimble Inc. (TRMB.O) beat Wall Street’s first-quarter revenue expectations, reporting $840.6 million in revenueahead of analysts’ forecast of $810.9 million, according to LSEG data. The solid performance was driven by sustained demand for the company’s navigation equipment, mapping tools, and software services, despite global economic uncertainty.

The company, whose solutions support industries such as agriculture, architecture, transportation, and design, continues to benefit from integrating artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning into its products, enhancing their value and appeal to enterprise customers.

Trimble CEO Rob Painter acknowledged the challenging macroeconomic climate, including pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump’s newly imposed import tariffs, which are expected to raise the cost of consumer goods and dampen spending. Despite these headwinds, Painter said the company would maintain its full-year 2025 guidance.

Trimble posted adjusted earnings of 61 cents per share, exceeding the 59 cents forecasted by analysts. For the second quarter, the company expects revenue between $815 million and $845 million, with analysts anticipating $826.5 million.

The earnings report reflects continued strength in Trimble’s core sectors and its ability to weather market volatility through technological innovation and diversified demand.

Palantir Shares Tumble Over 13% Despite Revenue Beat and Upgraded Forecast

Palantir Technologies (PLTR.O) saw its stock plunge more than 13% on Tuesday, as investors reacted negatively to quarterly results and a raised full-year forecast that fell short of Wall Street’s elevated expectations. This comes after the stock had soared 63% year-to-date, following a quadruple gain in 2023, driven by optimism around its AI capabilities and government contracts.

The Denver-based data analytics firm reported first-quarter revenue of $883.9 million, a 39% year-over-year increase, and above analyst expectations of $862.8 million, according to LSEG. U.S. government revenue surged 45%, highlighting continued momentum in federal and defense sectors.

Despite the beat, analysts say the market had already priced in strong performance, leaving little room for upside. We believe we have reached a point where respectable earnings beats and raised guidance aren’t enough to materially move the stock to the upside,” said Morningstar analyst Mark Giarelli.

Palantir now forecasts 2024 revenue between $3.89 billion and $3.90 billion, up from the prior estimate of $3.74 billion to $3.76 billion. The company also noted a record number of $1 million+ deals, with strong customer growth in U.S. commercial sectors such as healthcare, energy, and automotive.

However, valuation concerns are mounting. Palantir’s 12-month forward P/E ratio stands at 202.07, significantly higher than that of industry peers like Snowflake (131), Datadog (54.81), and Salesforce (23.48). If the stock decline holds, the company is poised to shed over $40 billion from its $292 billion market cap.

Despite the sell-off, at least nine brokerages raised their price targets for Palantir post-earnings, pushing the median target to $96.46a sign of continued long-term confidence in the firm’s AI-driven growth.