Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ:PLTR) CEO Alex Karp told CNBC today that enterprises that go to the big AI labs first often arrive at Palantir frustrated, revealing the company has even debated paying clients to try its rivals before signing up.

“Should we pay people to go to large language model companies before they come to us?” Karp said, describing an internal debate.

“Because people come out of there screaming saying, ‘This could never work for me. They don’t understand the enterprise. They want to token max.'”

Karp Dismisses The Wall Street Bear Case

CNBC pressed Karp on whether OpenAI and Anthropic, both racing toward public listings, could replicate Palantir’s business. Karp said “no one in enterprise factually is worried” and called the idea of copying Palantir with a simple integration “a complete farce.”

His core argument is a technical one. Large language models are probabilistic and only need to be “better than really 51%,” Karp said, which works for investing but not for mission-critical operations.

“If you want to manufacture a car and you need a part, or you want to send a rocket to the moon, or you want to put a missile on your adversary’s head and bring home Americans safely, that stuff doesn’t ship,” he said.

Karp also took aim at Silicon Valley’s culture, describing the San Francisco AI worldview as “largely religious” and saying rival engineers “don’t understand how unlikeable they are” to enterprise clients.

The SpaceX Factor

While Karp didn’t mince words about his Silicon Valley AI competitors, he was noticeably warmer toward another tech titan going public this week: Elon Musk.

Asked about SpaceX’s upcoming IPO and Palantir’s overlapping work in space defense, Karp offered a rare olive branch.

“I root for every entrepreneur. I'm rooting for Elon,” Karp said, noting the two companies partner in certain areas. “Bullish on Elon in space? Yes. Bullish on space? No idea”

Prediction Markets See The Showdown Coming

Traders on Polymarket assign a roughly 90% chance Anthropic completes an IPO by Dec. 31, following its reported confidential S-1 filing on June 1, and gives 83% odds it lists before OpenAI, which reportedly filed its own paperwork this week.

Karp’s macro warning may loom over both debuts. “The nationalization is coming,” he said, arguing AI’s gains will “disproportionately go to people who are already wealthy.”

PLTR shares are trading around $131 today, down roughly 21% year-to-date.

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