Sometimes the market likes bold bets, and sometimes it really doesn't. Oracle Corporation (ORCL) is learning this lesson the hard way right now.
The tech giant has made an enormous pivot toward artificial intelligence, and Wall Street is having second thoughts. Shares have dropped 25% in just one month, wiping out over $250 billion in market value that Oracle had built up after announcing its OpenAI deals back in September.
The Big Gamble
Oracle is going all-in on AI infrastructure. The company has committed to spend hundreds of billions over the next few years on chips and data centers, with much of that capacity earmarked for OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT. To fund this expansion, Oracle is borrowing heavily, which has made investors nervous.
According to the Financial Times, it's not just the size of Oracle's bet that's causing concern—it's the speed. The company is making this massive strategic shift at exactly the moment when investors are questioning whether big tech firms are overspending on data center buildouts. The timing could be better.
Playing Catch-Up
Part of the problem is that Oracle was late to the cloud computing party. While competitors were building cloud empires, Oracle stuck with its software business longer than many analysts thought wise. Now the company is trying to leapfrog straight to AI dominance, and that delayed transition is raising eyebrows.
The numbers tell the story: Oracle's stock decline is nearly double that of Meta (META), the next worst-performing hyperscaler in recent weeks.
Oracle's View
Despite the market's skepticism, Oracle remains bullish on its strategy. Company leaders argue that demand for AI computing power is growing faster than supply can keep up, meaning their massive investments should eventually pay off handsomely. Whether that confidence proves justified remains to be seen, but for now, investors are voting with their feet.