Snowflake Inc. (SNOW) had one of those classic "good news, bad news" days on Thursday. The good news? They beat earnings estimates. The bad news? Investors weren't impressed with what's coming next, and the stock took a beating in premarket trading.
Here's what happened. Snowflake delivered third-quarter revenue of $1.21 billion, topping analyst expectations of $1.18 billion. Adjusted earnings came in at 35 cents per share, ahead of the 31-cent consensus estimate. By traditional measures, that's a solid quarter. But the market fixated on the underlying story: product revenue growth is slowing down.
The company's fourth-quarter guidance didn't help ease concerns. Snowflake expects product revenue between $1.195 billion and $1.20 billion, representing roughly 27% year-over-year growth. Not terrible by most standards, but when you're a high-growth cloud company, deceleration makes investors nervous.
The Big AI Play: Anthropic Partnership
In what might be the most interesting development, Snowflake announced a massive expansion of its partnership with AI research firm Anthropic. We're talking about a multi-year, $200 million deal that brings Anthropic's Claude models directly onto the Snowflake platform.
What does this mean practically? Snowflake's 12,600 global customers across all three major cloud platforms will get access to Claude. The partnership also includes a joint go-to-market initiative to deploy AI agents across large enterprises. Claude will power Snowflake Intelligence, the company's enterprise intelligence agent, giving organizations access to all their knowledge through what Snowflake describes as "a single trusted agent" designed to drive curiosity and faster innovation.
It's a significant move in the AI arms race, positioning Snowflake as a key distribution channel for one of the leading AI models in the market.
Amazon and Accenture Get Bigger Too
The Anthropic deal wasn't the only partnership news. Snowflake revealed it's doubled its Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN) Web Services Marketplace transaction growth year-over-year, eclipsing $2 billion in annual sales. That's a meaningful milestone showing how enterprises are increasingly purchasing Snowflake through AWS rather than directly.
Together with AWS, Snowflake is helping clients modernize data platforms and build AI-ready architectures with open standards and unified governance. Translation: they're making it easier for companies to get their data house in order before deploying AI.
Meanwhile, Accenture plc (ACN) and Snowflake expanded their collaboration through a newly formed Accenture Snowflake Business Group. The goal is accelerating generative AI adoption for clients like Caterpillar, Inc. (CAT). The partnership combines Accenture AI Refinery with Snowflake Intelligence and Snowflake Cortex AI innovations to help enterprises transform their business models using cloud, AI, and data.
Why The Stock Fell Anyway
So why did shares drop 8.83% to $241.60 in premarket trading if there's all this good news about partnerships and earnings beats? It comes down to growth expectations. In the cloud software world, investors pay premium valuations for premium growth rates. When that growth rate decelerates, even if it's still respectable, the market reprices accordingly.
The partnerships with Anthropic, AWS, and Accenture signal Snowflake is positioning itself well for the AI-driven future. But investors wanted to see that translate into stronger near-term revenue growth, and the fourth-quarter guidance suggested that acceleration isn't happening yet. Sometimes in markets, it doesn't matter how many $200 million deals you announce if the quarterly numbers don't tell the story Wall Street wants to hear.