Snowflake Inc. (SNOW) is making a strategic move to solve one of enterprise data's most frustrating problems: all the essential context about your data is scattered everywhere. Information about data assets lives across databases, Business Intelligence tools, and orchestration systems, which makes it surprisingly difficult for both humans and AI agents to understand what they're actually looking at.
The cloud data platform company just entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Select Star and its platform technology. Financial terms weren't disclosed, but the strategic rationale is pretty clear.
Snowflake already offers Horizon Catalog, which unifies context and governance for AI across data assets. The company has started extending those capabilities beyond its own platform, and acquiring Select Star accelerates that expansion significantly.
Here's what Snowflake is getting: Select Star brings broad connectivity that spans PostgreSQL, MySQL, Tableau, Power BI, dbt, and Airflow. By integrating this technology, Snowflake will expand Horizon Catalog's visibility into an enterprise's complete data estate, not just what lives on Snowflake itself.
This matters especially for agentic AI experiences like Snowflake Intelligence and Cortex Code. With deeper context about where data comes from and how it's used, these AI tools can better understand and extract insights from complex enterprise environments.
Select Star's metadata context platform supports data lineage, impact analysis, and large-scale discovery. Snowflake plans to leverage these capabilities to bring clearer governance and trusted oversight to messy data environments.
Founder and CEO Shinji Kim, along with the Select Star team, will join Snowflake and drive the next phase of Horizon Catalog innovation.
From a financial perspective, Snowflake held approximately $1.88 billion in cash and cash equivalents as of July 31, giving it plenty of flexibility for strategic acquisitions.
The company expects third-quarter product revenue between $1.125 billion and $1.13 billion, representing approximately 25.5% year-over-year growth. For the full year, Snowflake anticipates product revenue of $4.395 billion, which would be 27% growth year over year.
SNOW Price Action: Snowflake shares were up 0.42% at $243.00 in premarket trading at the time of publication on Tuesday.