Oracle's $3 Billion Microsoft Deal Twist Adds to a Record Quarter's Darker Undercurrents
17.06.2026 - 09:37:06 | boerse-global.de
The market's punishment of Oracle's latest earnings was swift and severe, with shares shedding nearly 9% before settling into a weekly decline of close to 7%. The stock now trades at roughly €162 — a staggering 42% below its 52-week high and 8% beneath the 200-day moving average. At first glance, the sell-off seems baffling. Revenue hit a record $19.2 billion in the fiscal fourth quarter, up 21% year over year, while adjusted earnings per share of $2.03 edged past analyst forecasts. The cloud business expanded by nearly 50%, and the remaining performance obligations — essentially a backlog of committed contracts — swelled to an eye-popping $638 billion, a 363% surge from a year earlier.
Yet those headline numbers mask a deepening anxiety about how Oracle intends to bankroll its aggressive infrastructure build-out. Capital expenditures more than doubled to over $55 billion, driving free cash flow deep into negative territory at minus $23.7 billion. Operating cash flow did improve, climbing 54% to $32 billion, but investors are fixated on the financing hole. The company raised $48 billion through debt and equity last year and plans to tap markets for another $40 billion in the current fiscal year. The message from Wall Street is clear: growth is expensive, and the bill keeps arriving.
Compounding that cash-flow strain is a report that a proposed cloud partnership with Microsoft worth more than $3 billion is teetering. Microsoft had been looking to shift some of its own workloads onto Oracle's public cloud, but the deal has stalled over a missing security clearance. Oracle's public cloud lacks the FedRAMP certification required to handle U.S. government data, and the company has so far resisted retrofitting it, citing the enormous technical cost. A spokesman dismissed the rumor as "incorrect" without offering specifics, while Microsoft has stayed silent. For a business already under pressure to deliver on its cloud promises, any hint of a setback with a major customer like Microsoft amplifies the market's nervousness.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Oracle?
The $638 billion backlog, while impressive, comes with its own concentration risk. Bank of America analysts estimate that more than 50% of that total is tied to a single customer: OpenAI. The AI giant has prepaid for vast GPU capacity, giving Oracle a pipeline of future revenue that the bank expects roughly 12% of to convert into recognized sales in the near term — provided the data centers get built on schedule. That reliance on one partner is a double-edged sword: it makes revenue highly visible but leaves Oracle exposed to any shift in OpenAI's strategy or spending. Meanwhile, the overall cloud business missed analysts' expectations by a hair, and Oracle's own forecast calls for cloud growth to accelerate to around 60% in the first quarter of 2027 — a target that leaves little room for execution hiccups.
Oracle's management has lifted its adjusted earnings outlook to $8.05 per share and maintains a long-term revenue goal of $90 billion. The company's multicloud AI database, which stitches together AWS, Azure and Google Cloud infrastructure, grew 404% in the latest quarter and is hailed as the fastest-growing product in corporate history. But the unit economics are punishing. Analysts expect negative free cash flow to persist for years, with a potential inflection point not coming until around 2030. The market's annualized volatility of nearly 70% reflects deep uncertainty about whether demand can keep pace with the capital drain.
The sell-off has pushed Oracle's valuation to a notable discount relative to its earnings growth. Earnings per share have compounded at 19% annually, while the stock has risen only 13% per year. The average analyst price target stands at $220.25, implying a potential upside of roughly 36% from current levels. Bank of America views the recent rout as noise, pointing to the structural demand for Oracle's database services as enterprises diversify away from single-cloud dependency. Yet with a market cap of about €456 billion, the stock already prices in a good deal of doubt. The gap between today's price and that analyst consensus is effectively what the market is charging for patience — and in this phase of aggressive AI capital deployment, patience is a scarce commodity.
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