--- title: "Palantir (PLTR) vs. Salesforce (CRM): 3 Contract Signals That Will Move Federal IT Stocks" type: "News" locale: "zh-HK" url: "https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/257670619.md" description: "Palantir Technologies (PLTR) and Salesforce (CRM) are competing for federal IT contracts, with Palantir focusing on defense and intelligence analytics, while Salesforce leverages its extensive customer base and cloud capabilities. The competition could shift procurement dynamics, favoring platform players over niche providers. Key factors to watch include contract awards, revenue mix changes, and strategic partnerships. The outcome will influence future procurement cycles, determining whether Palantir can maintain its specialized analytics edge or if Salesforce can expand its presence in civilian agencies." datetime: "2025-09-17T07:27:43.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/257670619.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/257670619.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/257670619.md) --- > 支持的語言: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/257670619.md) | [English](https://longbridge.com/en/news/257670619.md) # Palantir (PLTR) vs. Salesforce (CRM): 3 Contract Signals That Will Move Federal IT Stocks There's a skirmish forming in government IT that could ripple through enterprise software stocks. At center stage: Palantir Technologies (NYSE: PLTR), long viewed as the go-to for complex defense and intelligence analytics, and Salesforce (NYSE: CRM), the CRM giant that's been quietly building a footprint in federal buying circles. Palantir's products - notably _Foundry_ for commercial users and _Gotham_ for classified work - are engineered for heavy-duty data fusion and mission use. That specialization has translated into durable government relationships and contracts that aren't easy to replicate overnight. They're embedded in workflows where long integration cycles and security clearances matter. Salesforce arrives at this fight with a different weapon set: a massive customer base, a flexible cloud platform, and increasingly powerful analytics through tools like Data Cloud and Tableau. It isn't a clone of Palantir, but it can bundle services that federal agencies prize: workflow automation, identity/compliance integrations, and scalable cloud operations. For civil agencies managing citizen services and operations, that bundle is attractive. So what changes if Salesforce pushes hardest for federal deals? First, the competition widens. Big-ticket procurement can shift from a handful of niche providers to platform players offering end-to-end suites. That tends to compress pricing and makes buyers more willing to buy 'platform-plus' rather than single-purpose point solutions. Second, procurement behavior matters - agencies that prefer standardized cloud certifications and multi-vendor interoperability may favor players with existing federal cloud offerings. Palantir's defenses are real. Deep domain expertise in classified environments, bespoke algorithmic layers, and long-standing operational ties with defense and intel communities create switching frictions. Palantir also sells into commercial sectors where Foundry's data-modeling plumbing is hard to rip out once embedded. Where the threat is clearest is in non-classified federal work and large civilian agencies. That's Salesforce's sweet spot: high-volume deployments, CRM-led modernization, and projects where scale and vendor consolidation win the procurement pitch. If agencies prioritize rapid deployment and vendor ecosystems over custom analytics tailored for intelligence missions, Salesforce can gain share quickly. For market participants watching the two tickers, several developments will matter more than PR theater: contract awards on key IDIQ and agency-level vehicles, changes in revenue mix (government vs. commercial), margin trends as each company prices deals, and strategic partnerships with hyperscalers or integrators that smooth government procurement. Also worth noting: any shift toward commoditized analytics or bundled platform offerings could pressure specialized pricing power. There's nuance here. This isn't a binary takeover or defense - it's a reshaping of competitive terrain. Palantir's moat in mission-critical, classified work remains tough to duplicate. Salesforce's muscle in civilian modernization and its sheer installed base mean it can pick pockets of opportunity fast, especially where agencies want a unified cloud stack and existing CRM hooks. Ultimately, expect more head-to-head moments in RFPs and contract awards over the next few procurement cycles. Will Palantir hold its ground in the parts of government that prize specialized analytics? Will Salesforce win by scaling into civil agencies and bundling services? The answers will show up in contract rollouts and the line items on future quarterly reports. ### 相關股票 - [Palantir Tech (PLTR.US)](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/quote/PLTR.US.md) - [Salesforce (CRM.US)](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/quote/CRM.US.md) ## 相關資訊與研究 - [Roger Wittlin Investment Advisory LLC Lowers Stock Holdings in Palantir Technologies Inc. $PLTR](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281708547.md) - [1 Artificial Intelligence (AI) Software Stock to Buy Hand Over Fist Before It Soars 62%, According to Dan Ives](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281430893.md) - [Palantir vs. Oracle: 1 AI Stock Looks Cheap](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281400403.md) - [Cyr Financial Inc. Buys Shares of 6,336 Palantir Technologies Inc. $PLTR](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281490816.md) - [Doug Ford Opposes Stellantis Deal With Tesla Rival Leapmotor To Manufacture In Canada's Ontario: 'Dead Against It'](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/281502197.md)