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The Indicator from Planet Money

The Indicator from Planet Money

A bite-sized show about big ideas. From the people who make Planet Money, The Indicator helps you make sense of what's happening in today's economy. It's a quick hit of insight into money, work, and business. Monday through Friday, in 10 minutes or less.

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    The Indicator from Planet Money
    Episode•August 8, 2025•9 min

    More for Palantir, less for mRNA, and a disaster database redemption arc

    It's ... Indicators of the Week! Our weekly look at some of the most fascinating economic numbers from the news. On today's episode: Palantir crosses a billion dollars in quarterly revenue (what do they actually do again?); mRNA vaccine research gets a big cut in RFK Jr's health department; and a climate disaster database gets a new lease on life. Related episodes: How Palantir, the secretive tech company, is rising in the Trump era (https://www.npr.org/2025/05/01/nx-s1-5372776/palantir-tech-contracts-trump) An indicator lost: big disaster costs (https://www.npr.org/2025/06/04/1253616079/an-indicator-lost-big-disaster-costs) Moonshot in the arm (https://www.npr.org/2021/11/05/1053003777/moonshot-in-the-arm) For sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org (http://plus.npr.org/). Fact-checking by Sierra Juarez (https://www.npr.org/people/g-s1-26724/sierra-juarez) and Cooper Katz McKim. Music by Drop Electric (https://dropelectric.bandcamp.com/). Find us: TikTok (https://www.tiktok.com/@planetmoney), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/planetmoney/), Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/planetmoney), Newsletter (https://www.npr.org/newsletter/money). To manage podcast ad preferences, review the links below: See pcm.adswizz.com (https://pcm.adswizz.com) for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices (https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices) NPR Privacy Policy (https://www.npr.org/about-npr/179878450/privacy-policy)

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    Transcript

    0:01
    Npr.
    0:12
    This is the Indicator from Planet Money. I'm Waylon Wong here with Darian Woods.
    0:16
    Hello.
    0:17
    Hello. And darkening, nay, brightening the indicator's doorstep is the astonishing Amanda Roncik.
    0:24
    I was like darkening. I only bring lightness and joy.
    0:28
    It's Jo True.
    0:31
    Amanda, you have delighted us at quite an opportune moment because right now, on this day, at this very second, is
    0:38
    Indicator of the Week.
    0:41
    What? I had no idea that that's why I was here. A surprise.
    0:47
    Well, I hope you brought an indicator because on today's episode we have Palantir
    0:52
    sales soar, the health department cuts more,
    0:56
    and for a billion dollar database, a new home is in.
    1:01
    That's all after the break.
    1:06
    Darian, it is Indicators of the Week. What is your indicator?
    1:11
    My indicator is $1 billion. That's how much sales the data company Palantir made over the last quarter. It's quite a big increase.
    1:18
    That's a lot of money. I didn't make a billion dollars this week.
    1:21
    So a lot of this growth comes from Palantir's growing contracts with the Trump administration. And to understand what it's doing there, I'll explain what Palantir does as a company.
    1:30
    That would be helpful because I feel I kind of know, but I don't really know.
    1:34
    So Palantir was co founded by Peter Thiel of PayPal fame a couple of years after 9 11. The idea was they could take similar anti fraud software that PayPal used and apply this to combating terrorism. And so now Palantir has a few lines of work like helping private companies with AI. But a lot of it revolves around integrating data sets from around government departments, mostly for intelligence and the military. A big one for the company is software called Palantir Gotham.
    2:04
    These names get darker and darker. Why couldn't they have called it Palantir Pleasantville, Palantir Whoville.
    2:12
    It's a mix of Lord of the Rings and Batman. You know what kind of literature these people are reading and it tracks people and predicts where they might go. It's not only used by intelligence agencies, but also police forces. And as for what that means, I'll let CEO Alex Karp speak for himself. Here's what he said in an earnings call earlier this year.
    2:35
    Palantir is here to disrupt and make
    2:39
    the institutions we partner with the very
    2:40
    best in the world. And when it's necessary to scare enemies and on occasion kill them, like actually kill them. What are we talking about here?
    2:50
    Oh, well, a lot of it's used for the Defense Department, so that is what the software end uses a lot of the time. And about the business that's grown under the Trump administration, One controversial project is a $30 million to build a database that sifts through immigration and criminal records to target, monitor in near real time and help deport people the government wants to remove.
    3:16
    Ah, yes, I have seen NPR reporter Bobby Allen has reported on this a bunch. If you want to hear more, you can go to his reporting too.
    3:23
    Yeah. And contracts like these have contributed to Palantir's growing valuation. It's now valued in the stock market at about $420 billion, which is among the very top echelon of companies in the US it's more than Johnson and Johnson, it's more than Home dep, it's more than bank of America. So its earning growth has been impressive. But a lot of analysts are warning that only a billion dollars in quarterly revenue isn't enough to justify a massive $420 billion valuation.
    3:51
    I mean, I'll say that's a huge gulf between revenue and this valuation. Speaking of a huge gulf of money, Amanda, what's your indicator?
    4:00
    That segues nicely into my indicator of the week, which is going to be a cut of $500 million. That is what the health department just cut from 22 project on MRNA vaccines.
    4:13
    MRNA vaccines. You are really taking me back to 2020, Amanda.
    4:17
    Yes. I'm gonna give you a little flashback. I promise to make it very quick. I don't wanna trigger anybody. April 2020, COVID 19 is spreading around the world. People are like, ah, if only we had a vaccine.
    4:29
    I definitely remember feeling that way.
    4:31
    I think we all felt that way. And at that point in time, MRNA science was a few decades old. COVID 19 hits. It's time to give this new technology a proper run. And then like, oh my goodness, there are some vaccines that are made unbelievably fast, faster than ever before. In just months, a vaccine is created and it's tested and it starts being produced. If you still have a vaccine card tucked in a drawer somewhere and you have the Pfizer Biontech or the Moderna vaccine, that is an MRNA vaccine.
    5:02
    Oh, I do have my card. Remember when you'd be like, which one did you get? You know?
    5:06
    Yes, I know. It was a little competitive. So that's. Those were the MRNA vaccines.
    5:10
    Uh huh.
    5:11
    They came out at different times and like, this all happened under the first Trump administration. It was part of what was called Operation Warp Speed, which was this public private partnership with big pharmaceutical companies and
    5:23
    ultimately those Vaccines saved millions of lives. Two of the researchers won the Nobel Prize in 2023.
    5:28
    Right. So this was a very big deal. Flashback over. Now, generally, big pharmaceutical companies do not want to make vaccines for diseases that only might go full pandemic or full outbreak. And this is why, historically, vaccine development is slow and insufficient when it's just like left up to the free market. And that's why the government was still investing 500 million in research to develop new vaccines for things like another Covid. A flu, maybe a bird flu.
    5:58
    So does this mean that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Isn't investing health department money in vaccine development anymore?
    6:04
    No, he still says he is. In this case, he just says he's cutting the funding for MRNA vaccines. He says that the MRNA vaccines fail to protect effectively against upper respiratory infections like Covid and flu. And sure, these vaccines are not perfect. People do still get sick. But the idea that they fail to protect effectively is simply not true. I hope that wasn't too much of a bummer for everybody. Waylon, what is your indicator?
    6:31
    Well, my indicator is going to sound a lot like Darian's indicator. It's $1 billion. I'm not here to talk about Palantir.
    6:39
    That's not often that that happens.
    6:41
    I know, right? But my billion dollars refers to the billion dollar weather and climate disasters database. This is a database of extreme weather events in the US that hit at least $1 billion in cost or damages. And it. That's the national oceanic and Atmospheric Administration indicator. Listeners might remember we did an episode on this database back in June.
    7:05
    Interesting. So it's a database of disasters that cost as much as one quarter of Palantir revenue.
    7:10
    Yeah. Someone should like, make a little graph, but yeah, yeah.
    7:15
    Or twice as much as there was in funding for MRNA vaccines.
    7:17
    Yeah, exactly.
    7:20
    So this is because the federal government retired the database. You can still see old data on the INOA website, but it hasn't been updated past 2024.
    7:27
    Right. And at the time we spoke with the database's architect, Adam Smith. He is a climatologist and he had taken the government buyout.
    7:35
    It's just hard and strange and I still. It still feels bizarre, frankly.
    7:42
    But guess what? I am here with an update on this billion dollar database. It's being brought out of retirement by a nonprofit called Climate Central, and they have hired Adam Smith. Climate Central told us they are excited that he's now on board and that he'll be bringing back the database.
    7:58
    I remember that Adam told us he was hoping to keep the work going with A nonprofit or a private company.
    8:03
    Yeah, this is what he said at the time.
    8:05
    It's pretty complicated landscape to redevelop something like this. It's certainly not straightforward, but that's where we are right now.
    8:14
    With.
    8:15
    Sounds like it is not that simple. You can't just copy and paste the data from one website to another. Although, I don't know, maybe you could. Like, what does he actually have to do to put the database back together?
    8:26
    Yeah. So Adam's team at NOAA had pulled in data from over a dozen public and private sources. So you had, like, the U.S. department of Agriculture and insurance companies, and that's because they were tallying up damages from natural disasters. And so they went around, you know, tabulating the value of homes and vehicles and forests and electricity grids. Like, it really runs the gamut. So they had to pull the numbers from a lot of places.
    8:49
    Well, that is super interesting that this, like, kind of orphaned government data has now found a new home. Thanks for the update, Waylon. Do I get to say that? Thanks for the update, Waylon. I feel like I just, like, live here in the indicator all the time, and I can just. Thank you. Thanks for being on my show, guys. It's great. It's wonderful to have you here. Both.
    9:13
    This episode was produced by Angel Carreras with engineering by Kwesi Lee. It was fact checked by Cyril Juarez and Cooper cats McKim. Kate Kincannon edits the show, and the indicator is a production of npr.

    More for Palantir, less for mRNA, and a disaster database redemption arc

    0:00
    0:00

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