Benchmark just kicked off coverage of Snowflake with a Buy rating and a $190 price target, calling the company a leading infrastructure choice in a $500 billion-plus AI Data Cloud opportunity. The call comes as the stock sits roughly 31% below its prior year-end, after a quarter that beat estimates but still showed headline losses and ongoing litigation. This piece walks through the thesis, the numbers, the risks, and why some investors see a contrarian opening in enterprise AI plumbing.
Benchmark’s initiation frames Snowflake as a strategic custodian of enterprise data and a core layer for generative AI and advanced LLM workloads, backing that view with a Buy and a $190 target. At the same time, Snowflake’s shares are trading well under that target, creating what Benchmark calls a measured entry point for infrastructure-focused buyers. The firm highlights a long runway where data governance and cross-cloud interoperability matter most to enterprise customers.
Q4 results gave the initiation some punch: adjusted EPS of $0.32 topped the $0.27 estimate and revenue came in at about $1.284 billion versus a $1.260 billion forecast. Remaining performance obligations climbed to roughly $9.77 billion, a 42% year-over-year rise that signals durable forward revenue. Benchmark also points to more than 9,100 accounts adopting Snowflake AI features and fast early traction for Snowflake Intelligence, which reached about 2,500 accounts within weeks of launch.
The product lineup centers on a consumption-based cloud data platform that now includes Snowflake Intelligence, Cortex AI, Cortex Code, Snowpark, and a marketplace for data and apps. That stack supports a global customer base topping 13,300 accounts, including roughly 790 companies on the Forbes Global 2000. The scale argument is straightforward: the platform is built for the enterprise use cases where data privacy, governance, and multi-cloud access matter most.
Benchmark’s valuation view is not a frothy bull case but a structural one: Snowflake fits the role of infrastructure provider for a growing AI data market, and the firm models toward Rule of 50-plus profitable growth driven by consistent beat-and-raise execution. Their $190 target sits notably below broader consensus figures, suggesting they see upside if execution and AI adoption continue. That conservatism is part of why they label it a contrarian pick rather than a speculative moonshot.
On the cash side, Snowflake showed an expanded free cash flow margin in the quarter, jumping to about 60% from 42% a year earlier, which underpins the company’s improving unit economics. Guidance for the next fiscal year calls for product revenue near $5.66 billion, implying roughly 27% year-over-year growth, and a non-GAAP adjusted free cash flow margin target in the low-to-mid twenties. Those figures matter to investors trying to balance growth with a path to durable cash generation.
Real risks remain and they’re plain on the balance sheet and in the courtroom: GAAP operating losses of $318 million in the quarter, significant stock-based compensation, and active securities litigation tied to a prior disclosure controversy all add volatility. The consumption-based model introduces revenue variability that can amplify macro swings, and a lead plaintiff deadline looms for litigation. Long-term investors must weigh those headwinds against the sizable market opportunity and customer adoption signals before taking a position.
CEO Sridhar Ramaswamy captured the strategic pitch directly: “Snowflake sits at the center of the enterprise AI revolution. For over a decade, we’ve built the foundation that makes AI safe and scalable — a single source of truth, cross-cloud interoperability, and enterprise-grade governance.” With shares trading well below recent peaks and the 200-day moving average, the initiation reads as a vote of confidence in Snowflake’s infrastructure role, while also acknowledging the very real operational and legal cross-currents that could shape returns.
