Oracle has endured a turbulent several months in the market. After plunging 52% from its record high achieved in late September 2024, the enterprise software powerhouse currently changes hands near $152 — a price point several analysts believe represents significant value.
Oracle Corporation, ORCL
The sharp decline stems from multiple investor concerns. The company inked an agreement with OpenAI to deliver $300 billion worth of computing infrastructure extending through 2031. Markets questioned whether OpenAI possessed the financial capability to honor such an enormous commitment. Compounding these worries, Oracle is deploying substantial capital — expenditures are anticipated to reach $57 billion throughout this year, supported in part by $135 billion in aggregate debt obligations.
Widespread anxiety that artificial intelligence would undermine legacy software companies also pressured shares. The “SaaS-pocalypse” narrative — suggesting AI-powered tools would cannibalize software-as-a-service revenue streams — triggered investor panic.
Yet Oracle’s third-quarter fiscal 2026 performance painted a dramatically different picture.
Aggregate revenue totaled $17.2 billion, representing 22% year-over-year expansion. This marked an acceleration from the 14% growth rate posted in the preceding quarter. The enterprise delivered results exceeding analyst expectations across all business units. Co-CEO Michael Sicilia emphasized that Oracle is integrating AI capabilities directly into its product portfolio, enhancing functionality — rather than rendering existing offerings obsolete.
The headline figure was cloud infrastructure revenue, which exploded 84% to $4.9 billion. This segment serves AI-focused enterprises requiring enormous computational resources — clients including OpenAI and Anthropic.
This represented the first quarter in 15 years where both aggregate revenue and non-GAAP earnings per share expanded by 20% or more simultaneously. Leadership characterized it as an “exceptional” performance period.
Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Thomas Blakey spotlighted Oracle’s recent contract victories spanning healthcare, financial services, and manufacturing verticals. Oppenheimer similarly endorsed the expansion trajectory. Mizuho analyst Siti Panigrahi observed that OpenAI’s $110 billion equity financing completed in February alleviated concerns regarding Oracle’s contract funding.
Profitability metrics warrant attention. The rapidly expanding cloud compute operation generates approximately 35% gross margins — beneath the company’s overall gross margin level in the upper 60s range. Nevertheless, Oracle’s multi-cloud database platform maintains gross margins between 60% and 80%, helping balance the dilutive impact.
Oracle maintains close to $40 billion in liquid assets. Analysts calculate aggregate cash requirements of approximately $75 billion spanning 2025 through 2028. Even if Oracle secures an additional $35 billion in borrowing to bridge this shortfall, maturing debt obligations should prevent total indebtedness from climbing further. Leadership also verified it hasn’t tapped its equity financing facility — eliminating a major shareholder dilution worry.
To finance infrastructure expansion, Oracle unveiled intentions to raise $50 billion during 2026 via investment-grade bond issuances and convertible preferred securities. The company had already secured $30 billion of this objective by the reporting date.
Revenue contributions from the OpenAI partnership are anticipated to materialize in 2027. Analysts project annual revenue growth of 35% extending through 2029, culminating at $207 billion. EPS expansion is forecasted at 28% per year.
At roughly 20x forward earnings, Oracle trades near its most attractive valuation in three years. At the identical multiple as the S&P 500 — 21x — shares would already command a premium. Should the stock return to 25x earnings, a modest assumption by historical benchmarks, analysts position the price objective at $240 by year-end.
Oracle’s Q3 free cash flow performance surpassed expectations, which management highlighted as validation the company could exceed its own financial guidance.
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