- Citron Research initiated a short position on Palantir shares on Friday, saying the stock's 300% leap since its direct listing on September 30 is unsustainable.
- The short-selling firm said it expected
Palantir to tumble roughly 33%, to $20, by the end of the year. - "As traders looking for short exposure, $PLTR is no longer a stock but a full casino," Citron said in a tweet.
- The news led Palantir to reverse strong early gains and slide as much as 10%.
- Watch Palantir trade live here.
Palantir will sink roughly 33% as reality catches up with its massive rally, Citron Research said Friday.
In a tweet, the short-selling firm established a year-end price target of $20 for Palantir shares. The data-mining company's shares are up more than 300% since a direct listing on September 30. Citron's target is still double Palantir's debut price, but Citron said Palantir's rally is unsustainable.
"What a run the past month for all. But as traders looking for short exposure, $PLTR is no longer a stock but a full casino," Citron said.
The news dragged Palantir shares out of a strong morning rally into a 10% loss at intraday lows. The stock then pared losses through the shortened session to trade roughly 4% lower into the close.
The stock enjoyed strong momentum through November after President-elect Joe Biden emerged as the winner of the 2020 election. Biden's victory prompted speculation that the new administration would cut military spending. The Defense Department is already one of Palantir's biggest customers, and budget cuts could drive more business to the company's lower-priced software from traditional providers.
Palantir traded at $30.69 as of 11 a.m. ET. The company has two "buy" ratings and three "hold" ratings from analysts.
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