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Oracle's Massive AI Bet Has Investors Reaching for the Panic Button

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
Oracle's ambitious push into AI infrastructure is rattling Wall Street. The tech giant's shares have tumbled 30% this quarter as investors grapple with $50 billion in planned capital spending, disappointing revenue results, and uncertainty around a complex TikTok deal that may not deliver the payoff initially expected.

Oracle Corp. (ORCL) is learning a tough lesson about the AI infrastructure game: building it costs a fortune, and investors want to see returns yesterday.

Shares of the software and cloud giant have fallen about 30% this quarter as Wall Street grows increasingly nervous about the company's capital-intensive pivot into AI infrastructure. The selloff comes just three months after Oracle tapped Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia as co-CEOs, leaving the new leadership team to navigate some choppy waters.

The Price Tag for AI Ambitions Keeps Growing

Here's what's making investors sweat: Oracle is spending money at a pace that would make even the most aggressive tech companies blink. In September, Oracle landed a massive deal with OpenAI worth more than $300 billion. Sounds great, right? Except it means Oracle needs to build out enough infrastructure capacity to actually deliver on that promise, and that's where things get expensive.

Chief Financial Officer Doug Kehring laid out the sobering details on the recent earnings call: Oracle is planning to spend $50 billion in capital expenditures during fiscal 2026. That's well above previous guidance. Add in roughly $248 billion in long-term leases to support cloud expansion, and you've got a balance sheet under serious strain.

The company's fiscal second-quarter 2026 results didn't exactly calm anyone's nerves. Revenue came in at $16.06 billion, missing analyst expectations of $16.21 billion. Free cash flow also disappointed investors looking for signs that all this spending would pay off soon. The one bright spot was adjusted earnings, which surged 54% year over year to $2.26 per share, easily topping estimates of $1.64. Total revenue climbed 14% on cloud growth.

But even that earnings beat wasn't enough. Several Wall Street firms responded by cutting their price targets on the stock.

On the technology front, Chairman and Chief Technology Officer Larry Ellison announced Oracle has sold Ampere and shifted to a chip-neutral strategy. The company is now committed to working with multiple CPU and GPU suppliers, though it will continue sourcing leading GPUs from Nvidia Corp. (NVDA).

The TikTok Deal That Wasn't What It Seemed

If the spending concerns weren't enough, Oracle's stock has also been whipsawed by evolving details around a potential TikTok partnership. Shares initially jumped when reports surfaced that a group led by Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX would acquire a significant stake in TikTok's U.S. operations.

That excitement didn't last long. A leaked memo revealed that the new investors wouldn't actually control the juicy parts of the business like advertising or TikTok Shop. TikTok CEO Shou Chew clarified that their role would be limited to a separate unit focused on data security and content moderation. So much for the revenue bonanza investors were imagining.

Adding to the pile of bad news, Blue Owl Capital exited a planned $10 billion data center project with Oracle.

Meanwhile, the competitive landscape keeps getting tougher. TikTok parent ByteDance reportedly plans to invest $23 billion in AI infrastructure during 2026 to compete with U.S. tech giants. It's a stark reminder of just how capital-intensive this AI arms race has become, and Oracle is right in the thick of it.

ORCL Price Action: Oracle shares were up 0.37% at $198.23 at the time of publication on Friday.

Oracle's Massive AI Bet Has Investors Reaching for the Panic Button

MarketDash Editorial Team
5 hours ago
Oracle's ambitious push into AI infrastructure is rattling Wall Street. The tech giant's shares have tumbled 30% this quarter as investors grapple with $50 billion in planned capital spending, disappointing revenue results, and uncertainty around a complex TikTok deal that may not deliver the payoff initially expected.

Oracle Corp. (ORCL) is learning a tough lesson about the AI infrastructure game: building it costs a fortune, and investors want to see returns yesterday.

Shares of the software and cloud giant have fallen about 30% this quarter as Wall Street grows increasingly nervous about the company's capital-intensive pivot into AI infrastructure. The selloff comes just three months after Oracle tapped Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia as co-CEOs, leaving the new leadership team to navigate some choppy waters.

The Price Tag for AI Ambitions Keeps Growing

Here's what's making investors sweat: Oracle is spending money at a pace that would make even the most aggressive tech companies blink. In September, Oracle landed a massive deal with OpenAI worth more than $300 billion. Sounds great, right? Except it means Oracle needs to build out enough infrastructure capacity to actually deliver on that promise, and that's where things get expensive.

Chief Financial Officer Doug Kehring laid out the sobering details on the recent earnings call: Oracle is planning to spend $50 billion in capital expenditures during fiscal 2026. That's well above previous guidance. Add in roughly $248 billion in long-term leases to support cloud expansion, and you've got a balance sheet under serious strain.

The company's fiscal second-quarter 2026 results didn't exactly calm anyone's nerves. Revenue came in at $16.06 billion, missing analyst expectations of $16.21 billion. Free cash flow also disappointed investors looking for signs that all this spending would pay off soon. The one bright spot was adjusted earnings, which surged 54% year over year to $2.26 per share, easily topping estimates of $1.64. Total revenue climbed 14% on cloud growth.

But even that earnings beat wasn't enough. Several Wall Street firms responded by cutting their price targets on the stock.

On the technology front, Chairman and Chief Technology Officer Larry Ellison announced Oracle has sold Ampere and shifted to a chip-neutral strategy. The company is now committed to working with multiple CPU and GPU suppliers, though it will continue sourcing leading GPUs from Nvidia Corp. (NVDA).

The TikTok Deal That Wasn't What It Seemed

If the spending concerns weren't enough, Oracle's stock has also been whipsawed by evolving details around a potential TikTok partnership. Shares initially jumped when reports surfaced that a group led by Oracle, Silver Lake, and MGX would acquire a significant stake in TikTok's U.S. operations.

That excitement didn't last long. A leaked memo revealed that the new investors wouldn't actually control the juicy parts of the business like advertising or TikTok Shop. TikTok CEO Shou Chew clarified that their role would be limited to a separate unit focused on data security and content moderation. So much for the revenue bonanza investors were imagining.

Adding to the pile of bad news, Blue Owl Capital exited a planned $10 billion data center project with Oracle.

Meanwhile, the competitive landscape keeps getting tougher. TikTok parent ByteDance reportedly plans to invest $23 billion in AI infrastructure during 2026 to compete with U.S. tech giants. It's a stark reminder of just how capital-intensive this AI arms race has become, and Oracle is right in the thick of it.

ORCL Price Action: Oracle shares were up 0.37% at $198.23 at the time of publication on Friday.

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