Oracle is actively promoting its AI data center progress and job creation efforts amidst significant investor concerns. The company's massive $300 billion OpenAI cloud contract, signed in September ...
Oracle faces a class action lawsuit from bondholders claiming the company misled investors. Wall Street analysts slashed price targets across the board over AI spending. Microsoft's earnings didn't ...
Oracle shares fell 2% on February 2 following the company’s announcement that it planned to raise upwards of $50 billion in 2026. That spike came after Oracle reported a 359% increase in its remaining ...
Oracle (ORCL) raised fiscal 2026 capex guidance to $50B from $35B. Oracle’s stock has nearly halved despite aggressive AI infrastructure buildout. Oracle’s total debt and lease obligations reached ...
Two companies at the center of the artificial-intelligence data center investment boom are parting ways, according to a report from the Financial Times. Oracle and alternative investments firm, Blue ...
Delayed AI infrastructure projects, rising debt, and weaker-than-expected earnings are reviving dot-com-era fears on Wall Street. Reading time 2 minutes After spending a year making it clear that it ...
Fresh concerns about data-center funding weighed down Oracle’s stock on Wednesday, but the selloff is looking overdone to some on Wall Street. Christine Ji is a reporter covering Big Tech.
Oracle Corp. said final negotiations on an equity deal for a data center project in Michigan are “on schedule” and doesn’t include Blue Owl Capital, a firm that has helped finance massive data center ...
Oracle’s $2.26 EPS beat relied on a $2.7B one-time gain. Core earnings missed at $1.33 versus $1.64 expected. CapEx guidance jumped $15B to $50B for fiscal 2026. Free cash flow burned $10B for the ...
Kara Greenberg is a senior news editor for Investopedia, where she does work writing, editing, and assigning daily markets and investing news. Prior to joining Investopedia, Kara was a researcher and ...
RUNNING A GIANT software business used to be fun. Sure, coming up with a great product was a grind. But once you had one that customers could not live without—be it Microsoft Office, Amazon.com, ...