ServiceNow (NYSE: NOW | NOW Price Prediction) and Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) sit on opposite ends of the enterprise artificial intelligence (AI) spectrum, so the question is simple: which one belongs in a retirement portfolio that prioritizes capital preservation and long-term compounding? This is a valuation stress test, not a growth race. Let’s run the numbers.
Dimension 1: Valuation Discipline
Palantir’s premium is in a different stratosphere. The stock trades at a trailing P/E of 166, a forward P/E of 105, an EV/Sales of 66, and a PEG of 0.7. ServiceNow trades at a trailing P/E of 72, a forward P/E of 21, an EV/Sales of 9, and a PEG of 4.2. Free cash flow yields tell the same story: Palantir’s $2.27 billion FCF equates to a 50.7% FCF margin. ServiceNow generated $4.58 billion in FCF in FY2025, with a 2026 FCF margin guide of 36%. Despite the higher margin, Palantir’s absolute FCF is far smaller.
Winner: ServiceNow. Margin of safety matters when you’re drawing down a portfolio.
Dimension 2: Durability of Growth
Palantir is delivering numbers that few enterprise software companies have ever produced. FY2025 revenue grew 56.2%, Q1 U.S. commercial revenue jumped 133% year over year, and management guided 2026 revenue to $7.65 billion to $7.66 billion (71% growth). CEO Alex Karp called the Rule of 40 score “an incredible 127%.” ServiceNow’s growth is slower but extraordinarily durable: FY2025 revenue of $13.28 billion (+20.88%), a 98% renewal rate, cRPO (current remaining performance obligations) of $12.85 billion (+25% year over year), and 603 customers with more than $5 million in annual contract value (ACV).
Winner on raw trajectory: Palantir. However, the durability profile, recurring revenue, contracted backlog, and diversified customer base favor ServiceNow once the question becomes whether growth survives a downturn.
Dimension 3: Drawdown Risk and Multiple Compression
This is where retirement capital lives or dies. Palantir carries a beta of 1.52 against ServiceNow’s 0.82. Palantir also issued $684 million in stock-based compensation in FY2025, ongoing dilution that retirees must absorb. ServiceNow has its own pain: shares are down 39.8% over the past year. Yet the company’s board authorized an additional $5 billion buyback in January 2026, with a $2 billion accelerated repurchase imminent. In a multiple compression scenario, ServiceNow has $4.58 billion of FCF and 20%+ subscription growth to defend the floor. Palantir would need to grow into a 110x forward P/E.
Winner: ServiceNow.
The Verdict
ServiceNow wins for a retirement-timeline investor. The verdict isn’t close. CEO Bill McDermott’s claim of a “consistent Rule of 55+ profile” describes exactly the kind of asset that compounds through cycles: predictable 20%+ growth, expanding margins (2026 non-GAAP operating margin guide of 32%), strong cash conversion, and a buyback program shrinking the share count. Analyst consensus reflects the same view.
Palantir is a genuinely exceptional business; Karp’s “we are an n of 1” claim is defensible on growth metrics alone. But a 73x sales multiple, retail-driven volatility, government concentration, and heavy SBC are the wrong risk profile for capital you cannot afford to rebuild. Palantir belongs in an aggressive-growth allocation for younger investors with a 20-year horizon who can tolerate 40%+ drawdowns. For a retirement portfolio, ServiceNow is the answer.