I Really Want to Invest in Palantir Technologies. Here's Why I Won't.

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Every so often in an investor's life, there will be a stock that you really want to own, but that you shouldn't buy. If you lack significant investment experience, or considerable willpower, you may be inclined to purchase the asset, potentially leading to future regret.

For me at the moment, the stock I'm wishing I held in my portfolio is Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR). Here's a look at why I'm interested in it -- and why I'm not buying it.

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Someone is wagging his finger, as if to say don't do it.
Image source: Getty Images.

Why do I wish I were a Palantir Technologies shareholder?

There are several reasons why I'm wishing I owned Palantir Technologies. For starters, it's been a phenomenal performer in recent years, and it's likely to keep growing, though perhaps at a slower rate as it becomes a bigger company. Check out its impressive trailing returns:

Period

Average annual gain

Year to date

276.53%

Past 1 year

236.53%

Past 3 years

45.22%

Data source: Morningstar.com, as of Nov. 25, 2024.

Eye-popping, right? It's worth noting that the company went public via an initial public offering (IPO) in only 2020, so it hasn't been around that long, and it posted losses instead of gains in both 2021 and 2022. Still, performances like those in its last two years are hard to resist.

Here's another tantalizing aspect of Palantir: It's in an exciting business, specializing in artificial intelligence (AI) software used by both businesses and governments to help them make better decisions. It appears to have a lot of room for growth, having a revenue run rate of about $3 billion annually and having estimated a total potential market of $119 billion back in 2020. (You're probably drooling over this stock, too, I bet.)

Why I'm not buying: It's outside my "circle of competence"

So why am I not buying? Well, one excellent reason to not buy is simply this: I am not an AI expert. I'm a long-term investor, aiming to hold onto my great stocks for years if not decades, but I don't have a good grasp of where Palantir will be in the future.

Warren Buffett has said that when investing, he respects his "circle of competence" and doesn't stray outside it, preferring to invest in companies he understands. Do I understand exactly how Palantir makes its money? No, I don't. Do I understand which kinds of companies are likely to fare best with AI technologies? Nope. Do I know which companies compete most directly with Palantir and what its strengths and weaknesses are? Negatory.