Palantir is one of the most polarizing stocks in the market right now — and one of the most interesting covered call candidates for a specific type of income trader. The company is genuinely profitable, growing at 56% annually, and sitting on $7.2 billion in cash. It’s also trading at valuation multiples that make traditional investors uncomfortable and analysts deeply divided.
For covered call income traders none of that fundamental debate matters as much as one question: does PLTR generate reliable premium income at a capital level accessible to retail traders — and can you manage the position without constant stress?
The answer is yes — with specific conditions that this review covers in full.
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At a Glance
| Overall Income Grade | B+ |
| Current Share Price | ~$142 |
| Monthly Premium Estimate | 4-7% of position value |
| Minimum Capital (100 shares) | ~$14,200 |
| Next Earnings Date | May 4, 2026 |
| Dividend | None |
| Best For | Intermediate income traders who believe in PLTR long-term and want to generate income while holding |
| Not For | Beginners, anyone who can’t hold through 30%+ drawdowns, traders without a clear earnings management plan |
About Palantir Technologies
Palantir Technologies (Nasdaq: PLTR) is a Denver-based software company founded in 2003 by Peter Thiel, Alex Karp, and others with early backing from the CIA’s venture arm In-Q-Tel. Originally built as a government intelligence and defense analytics platform, Palantir has evolved into what its CEO Alex Karp calls “the operating system for the modern enterprise in the era of AI.”
The company operates two primary business segments — Government and Commercial. The Government segment serves defense agencies, intelligence organizations, and federal departments across the US and allied nations. The Commercial segment serves large enterprises deploying AI-powered data analytics through Palantir’s AIP platform.
Recent contract wins underscore the business momentum: a $300 million USDA contract for AI and data analytics across food supply security, an ongoing Army relationship valued in the billions, and a £1.5 billion UK defense deal. US commercial was the fastest-growing segment at $1.465 billion for the full year, up 109% year over year.
The stock has been on a dramatic run — up over 1,600% in the past three years — before pulling back approximately 31% from its all-time high of $207.52. That pullback is part of what makes PLTR interesting for covered call income traders right now. The elevated IV from the drawdown means richer premiums than you’d find at peak prices — and the stock has pulled back to a level where analyst upside is more meaningful.
Key Stats
| Metric | Data |
|---|---|
| Current Price | ~$142 |
| 52-Week Range | $66.12 – $207.52 |
| Market Cap | ~$355 billion |
| Sector | Enterprise AI / Defense Technology |
| Beta | ~2.5 |
| 30-Day IV | ~60% |
| IV Percentile | ~52nd percentile (normal) |
| FY2025 Revenue | $4.475B (+56% YoY) |
| FY2025 Net Income | $1.625B (GAAP profitable) |
| Cash on Hand | $7.2 billion |
| FY2026 Revenue Guidance | $7.18-7.20B (+61% growth) |
| Next Earnings | May 4, 2026 |
| Analyst Consensus | Buy — 22 analysts |
| Analyst Price Target | ~$194.77 average (range: $50-$255) |
| Dividend | None |
What the Numbers Mean
Beta (~2.5) is the most important risk metric on this table. PLTR moves approximately 2.5x the S&P 500 — making it the most volatile stock in this review series. On a $142 stock that means a 10% market move could produce a 25% move in PLTR. That’s both the source of exceptional premium income and the source of significant drawdown risk. For a complete explanation see our guide on What Is Implied Volatility.
IV at ~60% with 52nd percentile means options are priced at approximately normal levels relative to PLTR’s own history — not historically elevated, not historically cheap. This is an important distinction: PLTR’s “normal” IV of 60% is dramatically higher than most large-cap stocks, which run 20-35% IV. Being at the 52nd percentile means you’re not getting peak premium — but you’re also not overpaying. A balanced entry point.
GAAP profitability is the most important fundamental factor for covered call traders. PLTR is GAAP profitable with FY2025 net income of $1.625 billion at a 36% margin and adjusted free cash flow of $2.27 billion at a 51% margin. This matters because it dramatically reduces the probability of a catastrophic fundamental collapse — the kind that turns a covered call position into a long-term bag-holding situation. Many high-IV small caps are cash-burning companies that can genuinely go to zero. PLTR cannot.
The valuation concern is real and worth acknowledging honestly. PLTR trades at roughly 80x trailing sales and 215x+ trailing P/E — the highest multiples among large-cap software stocks. This doesn’t mean the stock is heading to zero — the growth rate is extraordinary. But it does mean that any growth disappointment, macro deterioration, or AI narrative shift could trigger severe multiple compression. Position sizing and earnings management are non-negotiable here.
Income Scorecard
| Category | Grade | Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Premium Quality | A | ~60% IV generates 4-7% monthly yield — exceptional for a $142 stock with this quality of fundamentals |
| Liquidity | A+ | Deep, liquid options market. Weekly expirations available. Millions of contracts traded daily |
| Price Stability | D | Beta ~2.5, 52-week range $66-$207. This stock moves dramatically — the biggest risk in this review |
| Dividend Risk | A | No dividend — zero early assignment complications |
| Capital Required | B | ~$14,200 for 100 shares — accessible but 10x more than RDW. Needs $50,000+ account for proper sizing |
| Earnings Risk | C- | May 4 earnings imminent. PLTR has historically made large post-earnings moves in both directions |
Overall Income Grade: B+
PLTR earns a B+ driven by exceptional premium quality, best-in-class liquidity, and strong fundamental underpinning that reduces catastrophic downside risk. The low Price Stability grade and imminent earnings risk are the limiting factors. For traders who already own PLTR or have conviction in the AI theme — this is an easy A. For traders buying specifically for covered call income — the capital requirement and volatility profile demand careful sizing.
Premium Quality
PLTR’s covered call premiums are genuinely exceptional — particularly for a stock with this level of fundamental quality. At 60% IV on a $142 stock, the premium math is compelling:
30-day covered call at 15% out of the money ($163 strike):
- Premium: approximately $5.50-$8.00 per share
- On 100 shares: $550-$800 per month
- Monthly yield: 3.9-5.6% on the $14,200 position
30-day covered call at 10% out of the money ($156 strike):
- Premium: approximately $7.00-$10.00 per share
- On 100 shares: $700-$1,000 per month
- Monthly yield: 4.9-7.0% on the $14,200 position
Premium comparison across reviewed stocks:
| Stock | Price | IV | Monthly Yield | Capital/100 Shares |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RDW | $9.68 | ~150% | ~8% | $968 |
| RCAT | $12.80 | ~114% | ~7% | $1,280 |
| PLTR | $142 | ~60% | ~5% | $14,200 |
| TSLA | $400 | ~55% | ~2.5% | $40,000 |
PLTR sits in an interesting middle position — lower yield per dollar deployed than RDW and RCAT, but dramatically better than TSLA while delivering significantly stronger fundamental quality than the small-cap defense names. For traders who want meaningful premium on a profitable, growing company with deep options liquidity — PLTR is the strongest candidate in this tier.
For a complete breakdown of how premium is determined see our guide on How Options Pricing Works.
Liquidity
PLTR’s options liquidity is exceptional — among the best available to retail options traders outside of the mega-cap tech names. Weekly expirations are available across dozens of strike prices with millions of contracts trading daily. Bid-ask spreads on near-the-money options are extremely tight — often $0.05-$0.10 — meaning you enter and exit at fair value on every trade.
For covered call traders this means:
- Roll to any strike or expiration instantly without meaningful slippage
- Close at 50% of maximum profit without fighting wide spreads
- Enter and exit positions on any market day without affecting prices
- Access to weekly expirations for more granular income management
The liquidity also makes PLTR one of the cleanest stocks for rolling — a critical management tool for The Wheel Strategy. When you need to roll a threatened covered call, the depth of the options market means you can execute efficiently regardless of market conditions. For a complete guide on evaluating options liquidity see our How to Read the Options Chain guide.
Price Stability
This is the section that separates PLTR from every other stock in this review series — and not in a good way.
PLTR has a 52-week range of $66.12 to $207.52 — a 213% range from low to high. The stock has tripled from its lows, hit $207 at the peak, and pulled back 31% to current levels of approximately $142. A beta of approximately 2.5 means the stock moves more than twice as dramatically as the broader market on any given day.
For covered call income traders this creates the most extreme version of the high-premium / high-volatility tradeoff in this review series. The premiums are exceptional precisely because the stock can — and does — move 10-20% in short periods.
The scenario analysis on 100 shares at $142:
| Scenario | Stock Impact | Premium (3 months at 5%) | Net Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stock rises to $165 (capped at strike) | +$2,300 | +$2,130 | +$4,430 |
| Stock stays flat | $0 | +$2,130 | +$2,130 |
| Stock drops 20% to $114 | -$2,800 | +$2,130 | -$670 |
| Stock drops 40% to $85 | -$5,700 | +$2,130 | -$3,570 |
A 20% decline — which is well within PLTR’s normal volatility range — produces a net loss after three months of premium income. This is the fundamental risk of selling covered calls on high-beta momentum stocks. The premium is generous precisely because the risk is real.
The important context: PLTR has fallen 30% from its highs and is still up over 1,600% in the past three years. Long-term holders are deeply in profit. For them a 20% drawdown from current levels is uncomfortable but survivable. For traders buying PLTR at $142 specifically for covered call income — that same 20% drawdown is a genuine problem.
Dividend Risk
PLTR pays no dividend — a clean story for covered call traders. No ex-dividend early assignment complications, no timing requirements around quarterly payments. Your income is entirely self-generated through premium collection. For a complete explanation see our guide on What Is Assignment in Options Trading.
Capital Required
At approximately $142 per share, 100 shares costs roughly $14,200. This makes PLTR significantly more capital-intensive than RDW ($968) and RCAT ($1,280) — but dramatically less than TSLA ($40,000).
Account sizing guidance:
| Account Size | Max PLTR Position (15%) | Contracts | Monthly Premium Est. |
|---|---|---|---|
| $25,000 | $3,750 — insufficient | — | Not viable at 15% rule |
| $50,000 | $7,500 — insufficient | — | Not viable at 15% rule |
| $75,000 | $11,250 — borderline | — | Borderline |
| $100,000 | $15,000 | 1 contract | ~$710/month |
| $150,000 | $22,500 | 1 contract | ~$710/month |
| $250,000 | $37,500 | 2 contracts | ~$1,420/month |
The 15% position sizing rule means PLTR covered calls only make practical sense for accounts of $100,000 or more. Below that threshold a single 100-share position represents too large a percentage of the portfolio — and the stock’s beta of 2.5 makes oversized positions genuinely dangerous.
For smaller accounts where PLTR is appealing, consider selling cash-secured puts at lower strikes as a way to potentially acquire the stock at a meaningful discount before running covered calls. A $110 put on a $142 stock gives you a $32 buffer — and if assigned, your effective cost basis is further reduced by the put premium collected. See our complete Wheel Strategy guide for how to structure this approach.
Earnings Risk
PLTR reports Q1 2026 earnings on May 4, 2026 — just days away. This is the single most important management event for any current or prospective PLTR covered call position.
PLTR’s earnings history has been characterized by large post-announcement moves in both directions. The stock has gapped up 20%+ on strong beats and dropped 15%+ on guidance concerns. With the stock currently trading 31% below its all-time high, the earnings setup is particularly meaningful — a strong beat could rerate the stock significantly higher, while a disappointment could accelerate the current drawdown.
The specific dynamic for covered call holders:
Pre-earnings IV on PLTR is elevated above the already-high baseline — likely running 70-80% implied volatility in the days before May 4. This creates peak premium opportunity for covered call sellers — but also maximum gap risk from the announcement itself.
Management options before May 4:
Option A — Close before earnings (recommended for new positions)
Buy back short calls 2-3 days before May 4. You miss the final pre-earnings premium but eliminate gap risk entirely. After earnings are announced — particularly if the report is strong — re-establish the position at potentially higher strikes with fresh premium.
Option B — Hold with very wide strikes
If your covered call strike is $170+ with the stock at $142 — more than 20% out of the money — the buffer may be sufficient to hold through earnings. PLTR’s implied earnings move is typically 10-15% — a $170 strike provides meaningful cushion. Evaluate your specific strike before deciding.
Option C — Roll before earnings
Close the current position and open a new one at a higher strike and later expiration before May 4, collecting additional credit and increasing your buffer before the announcement.
Given that earnings are days away and the stock is already in a 31% drawdown, my strong recommendation is Option A — close before May 4 and re-establish after the report. The risk/reward of holding through earnings at current levels does not favor the income trader.
For a complete breakdown of trading options around earnings see our Best Options Strategy for Earnings guide and our What Is IV Crush guide.
Sector Outlook
Palantir operates at the center of two of the most powerful macro tailwinds in technology: enterprise AI adoption and defense spending expansion.
The company has guided for FY2026 revenue of $7.18-7.20 billion, representing 61% growth — an extraordinary growth rate for a company already generating $4.5 billion annually. The US commercial segment growing 109% year-over-year signals that enterprise AI adoption is genuinely accelerating, not slowing.
The government business provides a durable floor. Multi-year defense contracts with the US military and NATO allies generate predictable revenue regardless of quarterly AI sentiment shifts. The $300 million USDA contract, the Army relationship, and the UK defense deal all represent multi-year revenue streams that don’t disappear in a market downturn.
The honest risk: analyst targets range from $70 (Jefferies bear case) to $255 — the widest spread in this review series. That disagreement reflects genuine uncertainty about whether PLTR’s valuation is justified by its growth trajectory or is pricing in perfection at a level that leaves no margin for error. For covered call income traders the philosophical debate matters primarily through its effect on stock stability — and with beta of 2.5, that instability is the defining characteristic of the position.
PLTR vs RDW
| Factor | PLTR | RDW |
|---|---|---|
| Share price | ~$142 | ~$9.68 |
| Beta | ~2.5 | ~1.54 |
| IV | ~60% | ~150% |
| Monthly yield | ~5% | ~8% |
| Capital/100 shares | $14,200 | $968 |
| Profitability | GAAP profitable | Net losses |
| Revenue growth | +56% YoY | +10% YoY |
| Analyst consensus | Buy | Buy |
| Liquidity | Exceptional | Very good |
| Earnings risk | May 4 — imminent | May 13 |
| Dividend | None | None |
The comparison highlights the fundamental tradeoff clearly. RDW generates higher monthly yield per dollar deployed — but PLTR offers dramatically stronger fundamental quality, a profitable business, and superior liquidity. For accounts large enough to size PLTR properly ($100,000+), both belong in a diversified covered call income portfolio. For smaller accounts, RDW’s capital efficiency wins decisively.
Who It’s For
PLTR covered calls are a strong fit for:
- Investors who already own PLTR with meaningful gains — covered calls add income without changing the long-term thesis
- Accounts of $100,000+ where a $14,200 position represents appropriate sizing at 15% or less
- Traders who believe in Palantir’s AI and defense thesis long-term and want to compound income while holding
- Experienced options traders comfortable managing high-beta positions around earnings events
- Income traders who want large-company fundamental quality alongside elevated premium yields
PLTR covered calls are not a fit for:
- Accounts under $75,000 — the position size relative to portfolio creates excessive concentration risk
- Beginner covered call traders — the beta and earnings volatility demand active management experience
- Traders who can’t emotionally tolerate 20-30% stock drawdowns — PLTR has demonstrated it can and will move this way
- Anyone who doesn’t have a specific plan for managing through May 4 earnings
My Take
PLTR is the most interesting covered call candidate in the mid-cap AI space — and the one that requires the most discipline to trade well.
The fundamental story is genuinely compelling. A GAAP-profitable AI company growing revenue 56% annually with $7.2 billion in cash and accelerating commercial adoption is not a speculative concept stock. The premium quality at 60% IV is real and meaningful. The liquidity is exceptional. And the current 31% drawdown from all-time highs creates an entry point where analyst upside is more substantial than it was at $200.
The risk that defines this position is not the company — it’s the valuation and the beta. A stock trading at 215x earnings with a beta of 2.5 will move dramatically on any market narrative shift. The covered call premium provides meaningful income cushion — but not enough to protect against severe drawdowns on an oversized position.
My approach: size PLTR at 10-12% of total income portfolio — smaller than a typical position — target strikes 15-20% out of the money, close before earnings every cycle, and treat any significant post-earnings pullback as a cost basis improvement opportunity rather than a reason to exit.
The income is there. The discipline required to capture it is the variable.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is PLTR good for covered calls?
Yes — particularly for traders who already own the stock or have conviction in the AI and defense thesis. At approximately 60% implied volatility PLTR generates 4-7% monthly yield on the position — exceptional for a GAAP-profitable company of this quality. The key conditions: account size of $100,000+ for proper position sizing, active management around quarterly earnings, and genuine comfort holding through 20-30% drawdowns that are within PLTR’s normal volatility range.
How much premium can you make selling PLTR covered calls?
At current implied volatility of approximately 60%, a 30-day covered call at 10-15% out of the money generates approximately $5.50-$10.00 per share — $550-$1,000 per contract monthly. Monthly yield is approximately 4-7% on the position value. Check current premiums before entering as IV fluctuates and pre-earnings premiums are significantly elevated above post-earnings levels.
What strike price should I use for PLTR covered calls?
Target strikes 15-20% above the current stock price — roughly the 20-30 Delta range. At current prices near $142 that means strikes in the $163-$170 range for 30-day expirations. PLTR’s high beta means you want more buffer than you’d use on a lower-volatility stock — the 15% OTM minimum protects against the stock’s tendency to make large moves quickly. For a complete guide see our How to Pick the Right Strike Price guide.
What is the earnings risk for PLTR covered calls?
PLTR reports Q1 2026 earnings on May 4, 2026 — days away. The stock has historically made 10-20% moves following earnings announcements in both directions. For covered call holders the recommended approach is closing 2-3 days before the announcement and re-establishing after the report. Holding through earnings with wide strikes ($170+) is acceptable if your buffer is sufficient but carries real gap risk at current prices. See our Best Options Strategy for Earnings guide.
How many shares of PLTR do you need for covered calls?
The minimum is 100 shares — approximately $14,200 at current prices. The 15% position sizing rule means you need a $95,000+ account for a single contract to be properly sized. Most income traders running PLTR covered calls maintain accounts of $100,000-$250,000 and run 1-2 contracts. Smaller accounts are better served by lower-priced high-IV alternatives like RDW at $968/100 shares.
Should I buy PLTR before or after earnings for covered calls?
After earnings is almost always the better entry for a new covered call position on PLTR. Post-earnings IV crush reduces premiums somewhat but eliminates the gap risk of holding through the announcement. A strong Q1 report on May 4 that moves the stock higher would create a clean entry at a new price level with fresh premium and reduced near-term event risk.
How does PLTR compare to TSLA for covered calls?
Both are high-profile, high-IV stocks with substantial retail ownership. PLTR offers better premium efficiency per dollar deployed — approximately 5% monthly vs TSLA’s 2.5% — and significantly lower capital requirement ($14,200 vs $40,000 per contract). TSLA offers slightly better price stability and a more established fundamental story. For most income traders at mid-size accounts PLTR is the stronger covered call candidate of the two.
What is Palantir’s business model?
Palantir builds enterprise AI and data analytics software for government and commercial customers. The Government segment serves defense agencies and intelligence organizations. The Commercial segment deploys AIP — Palantir’s AI platform — to large enterprises. FY2025 revenue was $4.475 billion up 56% year-over-year, with GAAP net income of $1.625 billion and $7.2 billion in cash. The company is one of the few enterprise AI names that is fully GAAP profitable with accelerating growth.
