When Oracle Corporation (ORCL) reported quarterly results on Thursday, semiconductor investors weren't exactly thrilled with what they heard. The database giant's latest numbers told a complicated story: earnings looked great, revenue looked meh, and the spending plans looked enormous. The chip sector collectively shrugged and headed lower.
The damage was widespread. Nvidia Corp. (NVDA), Broadcom Inc. (AVGO), Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD), Marvell Technology Inc. (MRVL), Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSM), Micron Technology Inc. (MU), Intel Corp. (INTC), and Arm Holdings plc (ARM) all traded in the red following Oracle's update.
So what spooked the market? Oracle delivered strong earnings but soft top-line growth, creating questions about whether all that AI infrastructure spending is translating into actual revenue as quickly as everyone hoped. The company laid out an aggressive plan to scale its artificial intelligence infrastructure, announcing it would boost capital expenditures by $15 billion in fiscal 2026 to help convert what it described as a record $523 billion backlog into actual sales.
Oracle also projects an additional $4 billion in revenue by fiscal 2027 as AI-driven demand accelerates. The message is clear: we're going all-in on AI, and we need a lot of chips to do it. But the mixed results made investors nervous about the timing and pace of that conversion.
The Numbers: Great Profits, Light Revenue
Here's what Oracle actually reported: adjusted earnings per share jumped 54% to $2.26, easily beating expectations. That's the good news. The less good news? Revenue came in at $16.06 billion, which fell short of what Wall Street was hoping for.
The real eye-opener was the remaining performance obligations, which surged 433% year-over-year to $523 billion. That reflects massive demand for Oracle's cloud and AI services, but it also represents revenue that hasn't materialized yet. It's a pipeline, not a paycheck.
CFO Doug Caring tried to reassure investors, explaining that Oracle will expand capacity only when it meets profitability targets. Much of that enormous backlog is tied to multi-year AI infrastructure contracts for major customers, including Nvidia and Meta Platforms Inc. (META).
Despite reporting a negative free cash flow of $10 billion for the quarter, analysts widely view Oracle's capital-intensive strategy as essential for competing in the fast-moving AI infrastructure race. You can't play in the AI game without spending serious money on data centers and the chips that power them.
Oracle reported a 66% increase in cloud infrastructure revenue and announced plans to add 64 new cloud regions globally, reinforcing its ambition to become a foundational provider in the AI era. That's a lot of infrastructure, and it all needs semiconductors.
China Export Controls Add to the Pressure
As if Oracle's mixed results weren't enough, the broader chip sector is navigating increasingly tricky geopolitical terrain. The U.S. continues to tighten controls on advanced semiconductor exports to China, which happens to be both a major end market and a critical global manufacturing hub.
Nvidia is rolling out new software to trace where its AI processors are deployed in an effort to prevent illegal transfers into restricted markets. The tracking system will launch for its latest Blackwell chips and later extend to Hopper and Ampere generations. Think of it as LoJack for AI chips.
The initiative follows U.S. Justice Department charges against two Chinese nationals accused of smuggling Nvidia's H100 and H200 processors into China. The government is serious about keeping advanced AI chips out of certain hands, and Nvidia is trying to stay ahead of enforcement actions.
Meanwhile, Beijing is raising approval requirements for certain Nvidia AI chips as it pushes to reduce reliance on foreign technology and triple domestic AI chip output by 2026. It's a classic tech cold war dynamic: one side restricts exports, the other side builds domestic alternatives.
Price Action: Nvidia shares were down 1.37% at $181.26 during premarket trading on Thursday, according to market data. Oracle shares were down 12.38% at $195.40.




