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Oracle Shares Tumble as TikTok Deal Details Disappoint Investors

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Leaked memo shows Oracle and U.S. investors may have far less control over TikTok's profitable operations than markets initially believed, sending shares lower.

Oracle Corp (ORCL) shares dropped Tuesday afternoon, giving back gains from Monday's enthusiastic rally as investors digested some considerably less exciting details about the company's planned TikTok partnership.

Here's what happened: Monday brought news that a consortium led by Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX had agreed to acquire a significant stake in TikTok's U.S. operations. Investors loved it. Then came Tuesday and a leaked internal memo that, well, changed the mood entirely.

The Control Problem

According to TikTok CEO Shou Chew, the new U.S. investors won't actually control the parts of TikTok that make money. TikTok Shop? Nope. Ad sales? Not that either. Instead, their control appears limited to a newly created independent unit handling data security and content moderation. Important work, sure, but not exactly where the profit centers live.

That's a pretty significant detail, and it helps explain why Oracle shares went from "let's celebrate" to "wait, what exactly did we just buy into?" in the span of about 24 hours.

More Headwinds Piling Up

The TikTok disappointment isn't Oracle's only recent challenge. The company delivered mixed second-quarter results earlier this year, narrowly missing revenue estimates despite growth in its cloud business. Then earlier this month, financing partner Blue Owl Capital pulled out of a planned $10 billion data center project, which definitely didn't help investor confidence.

Meanwhile, the broader competitive landscape keeps getting tougher. Reports suggest TikTok parent ByteDance plans to invest $23 billion in AI infrastructure during 2026 to compete directly with U.S. tech giants. That's the kind of capital-intensive arms race Oracle finds itself navigating right now.

What the Numbers Say

Market data shows caution across the board for Oracle. The stock carries a Value score of 12.88, with negative trends appearing across short, medium, and long-term price horizons. Technical indicators paint a bearish picture, with shares trading 16.9% below recent highs and 8.7% below another critical benchmark.

Oracle shares were down 1.89% at $194.63 Tuesday afternoon. Sometimes the details really do matter, and in this case, the details about control and influence in the TikTok deal appear to matter quite a bit to investors reassessing what this partnership actually means for Oracle's future.

Oracle Shares Tumble as TikTok Deal Details Disappoint Investors

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
Leaked memo shows Oracle and U.S. investors may have far less control over TikTok's profitable operations than markets initially believed, sending shares lower.

Oracle Corp (ORCL) shares dropped Tuesday afternoon, giving back gains from Monday's enthusiastic rally as investors digested some considerably less exciting details about the company's planned TikTok partnership.

Here's what happened: Monday brought news that a consortium led by Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX had agreed to acquire a significant stake in TikTok's U.S. operations. Investors loved it. Then came Tuesday and a leaked internal memo that, well, changed the mood entirely.

The Control Problem

According to TikTok CEO Shou Chew, the new U.S. investors won't actually control the parts of TikTok that make money. TikTok Shop? Nope. Ad sales? Not that either. Instead, their control appears limited to a newly created independent unit handling data security and content moderation. Important work, sure, but not exactly where the profit centers live.

That's a pretty significant detail, and it helps explain why Oracle shares went from "let's celebrate" to "wait, what exactly did we just buy into?" in the span of about 24 hours.

More Headwinds Piling Up

The TikTok disappointment isn't Oracle's only recent challenge. The company delivered mixed second-quarter results earlier this year, narrowly missing revenue estimates despite growth in its cloud business. Then earlier this month, financing partner Blue Owl Capital pulled out of a planned $10 billion data center project, which definitely didn't help investor confidence.

Meanwhile, the broader competitive landscape keeps getting tougher. Reports suggest TikTok parent ByteDance plans to invest $23 billion in AI infrastructure during 2026 to compete directly with U.S. tech giants. That's the kind of capital-intensive arms race Oracle finds itself navigating right now.

What the Numbers Say

Market data shows caution across the board for Oracle. The stock carries a Value score of 12.88, with negative trends appearing across short, medium, and long-term price horizons. Technical indicators paint a bearish picture, with shares trading 16.9% below recent highs and 8.7% below another critical benchmark.

Oracle shares were down 1.89% at $194.63 Tuesday afternoon. Sometimes the details really do matter, and in this case, the details about control and influence in the TikTok deal appear to matter quite a bit to investors reassessing what this partnership actually means for Oracle's future.

    Oracle Shares Tumble as TikTok Deal Details Disappoint Investors - MarketDash News