Marketdash

Oracle Drops 6.5% After Mixed Q2 Results Despite Record 438% RPO Growth

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 hours ago
Oracle's fiscal Q2 results showed explosive growth in cloud infrastructure and remaining performance obligations, but a revenue miss sent shares tumbling in after-hours trading as the company pivots to chip and cloud neutrality strategies.

Oracle Corp (ORCL) reported fiscal 2026 second-quarter results Wednesday after the close, and the market's reaction was swift and unforgiving. Shares dropped 6.5% in after-hours trading to $208.44, even as the software giant delivered some genuinely impressive numbers buried beneath a headline revenue miss.

The Numbers That Mattered

Oracle posted revenue of $16.06 billion, falling short of the $16.21 billion analysts were expecting. But here's where it gets interesting: adjusted earnings jumped 54% year-over-year to $2.26 per share, crushing estimates of $1.64 per share. Total revenue still grew 14% year-over-year, driven by cloud revenue climbing 24% while legacy software revenue declined 3%.

The real story lives in the segment breakdown. Cloud infrastructure revenue hit $4.1 billion, up a blistering 68%. Total cloud revenue reached $8 billion, up 34%. Cloud applications grew 11% to $3.9 billion, with Fusion Cloud ERP up 18% to $1.1 billion and NetSuite Cloud ERP up 13% to $1 billion.

Then there's the number that should make everyone pay attention: remaining performance obligations totaled $523 billion at quarter's end, up 438% year-over-year. That's future revenue already contracted but not yet recognized. Oracle also exited the period with approximately $19.24 billion in cash and cash equivalents.

Neutrality as Strategy

CEO Mike Sicilia highlighted the company's "Cloud Neutrality" approach, which essentially means letting customers run Oracle databases wherever they want. "We believe that our customers should be able to run their Oracle databases in any cloud they choose. That strategy is definitely paying off. Our Multicloud database business is our fastest-growing business — up 817% in Q2," Sicilia said.

Chairman and CTO Larry Ellison dropped another strategic bombshell: Oracle sold Ampere because the company no longer sees chip design and manufacturing as strategic. "We are now committed to a policy of chip neutrality where we work closely with all our CPU and GPU suppliers. Of course, we will continue to buy the latest GPUs from Nvidia, but we need to be prepared and able to deploy whatever chips our customers want to buy," Ellison explained.

It's a pragmatic pivot. Rather than compete in chip design, Oracle is positioning itself as Switzerland in the infrastructure wars.

Shareholder Returns

The board declared a quarterly cash dividend of 50 cents per share, payable January 23, 2026, to shareholders of record as of January 9, 2026.

The company's earnings call was scheduled for 5 p.m. ET Wednesday, where management typically provides forward guidance that often moves the stock more than the actual results.

Oracle Drops 6.5% After Mixed Q2 Results Despite Record 438% RPO Growth

MarketDash Editorial Team
4 hours ago
Oracle's fiscal Q2 results showed explosive growth in cloud infrastructure and remaining performance obligations, but a revenue miss sent shares tumbling in after-hours trading as the company pivots to chip and cloud neutrality strategies.

Oracle Corp (ORCL) reported fiscal 2026 second-quarter results Wednesday after the close, and the market's reaction was swift and unforgiving. Shares dropped 6.5% in after-hours trading to $208.44, even as the software giant delivered some genuinely impressive numbers buried beneath a headline revenue miss.

The Numbers That Mattered

Oracle posted revenue of $16.06 billion, falling short of the $16.21 billion analysts were expecting. But here's where it gets interesting: adjusted earnings jumped 54% year-over-year to $2.26 per share, crushing estimates of $1.64 per share. Total revenue still grew 14% year-over-year, driven by cloud revenue climbing 24% while legacy software revenue declined 3%.

The real story lives in the segment breakdown. Cloud infrastructure revenue hit $4.1 billion, up a blistering 68%. Total cloud revenue reached $8 billion, up 34%. Cloud applications grew 11% to $3.9 billion, with Fusion Cloud ERP up 18% to $1.1 billion and NetSuite Cloud ERP up 13% to $1 billion.

Then there's the number that should make everyone pay attention: remaining performance obligations totaled $523 billion at quarter's end, up 438% year-over-year. That's future revenue already contracted but not yet recognized. Oracle also exited the period with approximately $19.24 billion in cash and cash equivalents.

Neutrality as Strategy

CEO Mike Sicilia highlighted the company's "Cloud Neutrality" approach, which essentially means letting customers run Oracle databases wherever they want. "We believe that our customers should be able to run their Oracle databases in any cloud they choose. That strategy is definitely paying off. Our Multicloud database business is our fastest-growing business — up 817% in Q2," Sicilia said.

Chairman and CTO Larry Ellison dropped another strategic bombshell: Oracle sold Ampere because the company no longer sees chip design and manufacturing as strategic. "We are now committed to a policy of chip neutrality where we work closely with all our CPU and GPU suppliers. Of course, we will continue to buy the latest GPUs from Nvidia, but we need to be prepared and able to deploy whatever chips our customers want to buy," Ellison explained.

It's a pragmatic pivot. Rather than compete in chip design, Oracle is positioning itself as Switzerland in the infrastructure wars.

Shareholder Returns

The board declared a quarterly cash dividend of 50 cents per share, payable January 23, 2026, to shareholders of record as of January 9, 2026.

The company's earnings call was scheduled for 5 p.m. ET Wednesday, where management typically provides forward guidance that often moves the stock more than the actual results.