Snowflake’s title bet references an $80 billion data opportunity, but the number in the Q1 FY27 filing that actually validates the thesis is the size of the contracted backlog. That contracted figure is what long-term holders should anchor on.
The Number
Snowflake (NYSE:SNOW | SNOW Price Prediction) closed Q1 FY27 with $9.21 billion in remaining performance obligations, up 38% year over year. The company reported the figure on May 27, 2026. RPO represents contracted business Snowflake has booked with customers but has not yet recognized as revenue. This figure grew faster than the 33.48% quarterly revenue increase, which is the tell.
What It Means
RPO is the backlog. When this number accelerates past revenue growth, customers are signing longer, larger contracts. Product revenue for the quarter came in at $1.33 billion, up 34% year over year, which management described as the strongest sequential dollar growth in the company’s history. Net revenue retention held at 126%, meaning existing customers spent 26% more than a year ago.
Perhaps more important is the count of customers generating more than $1 million in trailing product revenue. This figure reached 779 this past quarter (up 29% YoY), with Snowflake adding 616 net new customers (up 38% YoY), and showcasing 13,600+ accounts are now using Snowflake AI capabilities.
Market Reaction
Shares closed at $260.15 on July 2, 2026, up 18.6% year to date from a start of $219.36 on December 31, 2025. On a one-week view, SNOW rose 14.57%, moving from $227.06 on June 25, 2026 to $260.15 on July 2, 2026. On the one-year view, the stock is up 19.7% from $217.34 on July 2, 2025. Following the Q1 earnings report, shares moved from $177.4949 at filing to $255.55 one day after.
Bull Case
The $9.21 billion backlog is the foundation. Management raised full-year FY27 product revenue guidance to $5.84 billion, implying 31% growth, up from prior guidance of $5.66 billion at 27%. Non-GAAP operating margin guidance rose to 13.5%, from 12.5%, and non-GAAP adjusted free cash flow margin is guided at 23.0%. Q2 FY27 product revenue is guided to $1,415 million to $1,420 million, or 30% growth.
AI adoption is doing the work behind those raises. Cortex Code is now inside 7,100+ accounts, and Snowflake Intelligence accounts more than doubled quarter over quarter. Some of Snowflake’s strategic moves included a $6 billion multi-year AWS agreement, a deepened OpenAI partnership, general availability of SAP partnership capabilities, and the acquisition of Natoma, an enterprise Model Context Protocol platform for AI agents.
CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy called Q1 “a milestone quarter” and framed the company’s AI product suite as the company becoming “the control plane for the Agentic Enterprise.” Non-GAAP EPS came in at $0.39 versus a $0.3198 estimate, a 21.95% beat, the fourth consecutive quarter of beating consensus. Free cash flow reached $232.77 million, up 26.93% YoY, and Snowflake repurchased $300.03 million of its own stock in the quarter. TD Cowen reiterated a Buy rating with a $300 price target on June 2, 2026.
Bottom Line
For retirement-focused holders, RPO growing faster than revenue is the metric that matters most. It signals longer contract durations and stronger customer conviction, and it gives management visibility to keep raising guidance.
The AI attach rate across 13,600+ accounts is converting into contracted dollars on the balance sheet. Shares have already caught a bid, up 18.6% year to date, but Snowflake’s backlog compounds independent of any single quarter’s headlines. The next catalyst is the Q2 FY27 report, and the number to keep an eye on is whether RPO growth stays ahead of product revenue growth. If it does, the raised full-year outlook is unlikely to be the last one this fiscal year.
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