If readers want to know if the Oracle AI story is dead or not, then listen here.
The story is still alive, so don’t give up on a good thing.
Oracle is getting swept up with the wider macroeconomic scare that has been triggered by geopolitics.
The fear porn has reached fever pitch and is causing tech stocks to detour from their usual self.
The question now is if the sabre-rattling will result in the economic recession we have been waiting 6 years for.
The flood of government money for at least 4 of those years carried spending habits even if those jobs were unproductive or fraudulent.
As it relates to Oracle’s business model, there is no recession in the sub-sector they are in, but I believe they chose to tank the earnings result since all equities were getting dragged down.
The truth is that Oracle’s business is experiencing great growth in the cloud, and AI demand is accelerating sales growth.
The macroeconomic volatility gave Oracle’s management the perfect excuse to guide down since a high forecast would have resulted in a selloff anyway.
Oracle's leadership encouraged investors to focus on the potential for its cloud business to benefit from enterprise AI spending.
A growing backlog for cloud services is giving the company clear visibility for beating growth metrics.
Meanwhile, sales of Oracle's closely watched cloud-infrastructure business increased 49%, compared with 52% growth for the segment in Oracle's November-ended quarter. Oracle's guidance for the May-ending quarter of 9% revenue growth missed previous forecasts of 9.5% growth.
Oracle's cloud infrastructure business is racing to build out computing capacity for AI startups and other users of the cloud. The Oracle Cloud Infrastructure business rents computing power to other companies, competing against much larger hyperscalers Amazon.com (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), and Alphabet's (GOOGL) Google.
Chairman and Chief Technology Officer Larry Ellison said that Oracle is on track to double its data-center capacity during the calendar year. The company now expects capital expenditures to grow to $16 billion for its May-ending fiscal 2025, roughly doubling from a year earlier.
Ellison appeared at the White House in late January with President Donald Trump, OpenAI leader Sam Altman, and SoftBank Chief Executive Masayoshi Son to announce an AI infrastructure effort costing $100 billion called Stargate.
While tight data center capacity has demanded some patience from investors, I believe that we move past some of the capacity constraints in the second half of this calendar year.
The deep selloff from $190 per share to $140 has to hurt.
It was just only a short time ago when Oracle was a deadbeat tech stock left behind by the likes of Apple and Facebook.
They have reinvented themselves as an AI infrastructure company, and that has done wonders for their stock.
When they were down in the dumps, ORCL stock was trading below $50, so we are a far cry from that.
Once the tech market gets its mojo back, ORCL will definitely return back in form to that buy the dip stock that did so well in 2023 and 2024.
Just bide your time until we can jump back into ORCL.