Palantir Technologies (PLTR) is pushing further into Latin America, announcing an expanded enterprise agreement with GNP Seguros, Mexico’s largest insurer. It’s the company’s first publicly announced commercial customer in the region.
PLTR stock was up 1.4% in premarket trading on Tuesday following the news, with the stock sitting at a market cap of around $317.7 billion.
Palantir Technologies Inc., PLTR
GNP Seguros, part of Grupo Nacional Provincial and the Grupo BAL consortium, has already been running Palantir’s Foundry and Artificial Intelligence Platform in targeted deployments. The expanded deal will now roll those tools out across GNP’s health, life, auto, and damage insurance lines.
The platforms are designed to detect claims fraud before payments go out, monitor risk, and sharpen underwriting decisions — all while keeping human oversight in the loop.
Eduardo Esteve, Palantir’s VP for Latin America, called GNP Seguros “one of Mexico’s most important institutions.” On the GNP side, Enrique Ibarra, Director of Information and Transformation, said unifying data and using AI was a “natural step” in the company’s strategy.
This isn’t Palantir’s first rodeo in the region. The company previously worked with Brazilian media giant Grupo Globo, one of its early private-sector clients, which used Foundry to get its data house in order. GNP Seguros is now the second high-profile Latin American win.
The timing of the announcement matters. Palantir just wrapped up its worst month since February 2021, with PLTR dropping more than 25% in June. Two things drove that: a broad sector rotation out of software stocks and growing concern over the potential loss of a long-running contract with the UK’s National Health Service.
What helped stop the bleeding was a partnership with Nvidia to build AI models for U.S. government agencies and critical infrastructure. DA Davidson also upgraded PLTR from Neutral to Buy during the stretch, raising its price target and pointing to the company’s growing profits and competitive position in the AI space.
Palantir posted revenue growth of 68% over the last twelve months, reaching $5.2 billion. Gross profit margins sit at 84%.
Despite the commercial push, Palantir’s core business is still very much defense and national security. U.S. government revenue grew 84% year over year to $687 million in the latest quarter — nearly half of total company revenue.
The company has been expanding its footprint with American allies internationally, and has provided data platforms to support Ukraine’s war effort against Russia. CEO Alex Karp has said that work put him on a Kremlin hit list.
On the commercial side, the company has been scaling up with names like Stellantis and Airbus. The Sompo Holdings partnership in Japan — where Palantir embedded AI agents into claims and underwriting — mirrors closely what GNP Seguros is now doing in Mexico.
Palantir’s InvestingPro fair value analysis currently flags the stock as overvalued, though the company’s fundamentals continue to show strong momentum heading into the second half of 2026.
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