Marketdash

Oracle Faces Earnings Test After Tough Quarter

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 hours ago
Oracle Corporation reports second-quarter results Wednesday evening after struggling to meet Wall Street expectations last quarter. Shares are down 33% over three months despite remaining up more than 30% year-to-date on AI momentum.

Oracle Corporation (ORCL) is under the microscope Wednesday as investors brace for second-quarter earnings after the closing bell. And honestly, the company has some work to do to win back confidence after a disappointing previous quarter.

What's Happening: Wall Street is looking for earnings per share of $1.64 and revenue of $16.21 billion for fiscal Q2 2026, according to analyst estimates. Those numbers matter because Oracle stumbled last time around, posting EPS of $1.47 versus the expected $1.48, while revenue came in at $14.93 billion against estimates of $15.03 billion. Small misses, sure, but the market hasn't been forgiving.

The stock tells the story pretty clearly. Oracle shares have dropped roughly 33% over the past three months as investors digest the company's recent struggles to hit Wall Street's targets. Here's the interesting part though: despite that sharp pullback, the stock is still up more than 30% year-to-date. That's the AI boom working its magic, as Oracle positions itself as a key infrastructure player in the artificial intelligence buildout.

The Path Forward: Oracle needs to prove it can consistently deliver on expectations. The company has missed revenue and earnings estimates in recent quarters, which doesn't exactly inspire confidence. But CEO Safra Catz offered an intriguing preview last quarter: "Over the next few months, we expect to sign-up several additional multi-billion-dollar customers and RPO is likely to exceed half-a-trillion dollars."

That's a bold statement, and investors will be listening closely for any customer announcement updates when executives host their conference call at 5 p.m. ET Wednesday. Half a trillion dollars in remaining performance obligations would be a massive validation of Oracle's cloud strategy.

What Analysts Are Saying: Ahead of the report, several analysts tweaked their price targets, though they're staying generally bullish:

  • Barclays analyst Raimo Lenschow kept an Overweight rating but trimmed his target from $400 to $330.
  • Citigroup analyst Tyler Radke maintained a Buy rating while lowering his target from $415 to $375.
  • Wells Fargo analyst Michael Turrin initiated coverage with an Overweight rating and a $280 price target.

Even with the target cuts, analysts seem to believe in Oracle's long-term positioning.

Current Action: As of Wednesday's trading session, Oracle shares were down 0.68% at $220.01. All eyes now turn to the earnings release and what management has to say about those promised billion-dollar customer wins.

Oracle Faces Earnings Test After Tough Quarter

MarketDash Editorial Team
7 hours ago
Oracle Corporation reports second-quarter results Wednesday evening after struggling to meet Wall Street expectations last quarter. Shares are down 33% over three months despite remaining up more than 30% year-to-date on AI momentum.

Oracle Corporation (ORCL) is under the microscope Wednesday as investors brace for second-quarter earnings after the closing bell. And honestly, the company has some work to do to win back confidence after a disappointing previous quarter.

What's Happening: Wall Street is looking for earnings per share of $1.64 and revenue of $16.21 billion for fiscal Q2 2026, according to analyst estimates. Those numbers matter because Oracle stumbled last time around, posting EPS of $1.47 versus the expected $1.48, while revenue came in at $14.93 billion against estimates of $15.03 billion. Small misses, sure, but the market hasn't been forgiving.

The stock tells the story pretty clearly. Oracle shares have dropped roughly 33% over the past three months as investors digest the company's recent struggles to hit Wall Street's targets. Here's the interesting part though: despite that sharp pullback, the stock is still up more than 30% year-to-date. That's the AI boom working its magic, as Oracle positions itself as a key infrastructure player in the artificial intelligence buildout.

The Path Forward: Oracle needs to prove it can consistently deliver on expectations. The company has missed revenue and earnings estimates in recent quarters, which doesn't exactly inspire confidence. But CEO Safra Catz offered an intriguing preview last quarter: "Over the next few months, we expect to sign-up several additional multi-billion-dollar customers and RPO is likely to exceed half-a-trillion dollars."

That's a bold statement, and investors will be listening closely for any customer announcement updates when executives host their conference call at 5 p.m. ET Wednesday. Half a trillion dollars in remaining performance obligations would be a massive validation of Oracle's cloud strategy.

What Analysts Are Saying: Ahead of the report, several analysts tweaked their price targets, though they're staying generally bullish:

  • Barclays analyst Raimo Lenschow kept an Overweight rating but trimmed his target from $400 to $330.
  • Citigroup analyst Tyler Radke maintained a Buy rating while lowering his target from $415 to $375.
  • Wells Fargo analyst Michael Turrin initiated coverage with an Overweight rating and a $280 price target.

Even with the target cuts, analysts seem to believe in Oracle's long-term positioning.

Current Action: As of Wednesday's trading session, Oracle shares were down 0.68% at $220.01. All eyes now turn to the earnings release and what management has to say about those promised billion-dollar customer wins.