Oracle Corporation (NYSE: ORCL) extended its recent losses on Wednesday, with shares dropping 4.62% to close at $157.53 as investors reacted to mounting expenses tied to the company’s artificial intelligence expansion strategy.
The decline marked Oracle’s third straight losing session and came despite relatively modest weakness in broader markets. Trading activity remained elevated, with approximately 37.7 million shares changing hands, well above the company’s 50-day average volume, signaling heightened investor attention following the release of Oracle’s latest annual report.
Oracle’s aggressive push into artificial intelligence infrastructure is rapidly transforming the company from a traditional software giant into a capital-intensive cloud operator.
The company’s fiscal 2026 capital expenditures surged to $55.7 billion, more than doubling from $21.2 billion recorded a year earlier. Most of that spending has been directed toward constructing and equipping AI-focused data centers as Oracle races to meet soaring demand for cloud computing capacity.
Oracle Corporation, ORCL
However, investors appear increasingly concerned about the pace of spending relative to revenue generation.
Oracle reported cloud infrastructure revenue of $18.1 billion for fiscal 2026, meaning the company spent roughly three dollars on capital investments for every dollar generated from its cloud infrastructure business. Even when including total cloud revenue of $34 billion, capital expenditures still exceeded cloud sales on a per-dollar basis.
The imbalance has raised questions on Wall Street about how long it will take for Oracle’s substantial AI investments to translate into meaningful earnings and free cash flow.
Despite concerns over spending, Oracle continues to report exceptionally strong customer demand.The company disclosed that its remaining performance obligations (RPO), a measure of contracted future revenue, soared to $638 billion as of May 31, up dramatically from $138 billion one year earlier.
That figure significantly exceeds Oracle’s current market capitalization and reflects the growing number of large-scale cloud and AI agreements signed in recent quarters.
Oracle also revealed that customers have committed approximately $75 billion in prepaid funding or customer-supplied hardware related to major AI contracts during the second half of fiscal 2026. These arrangements could reduce some of the financing burden associated with expanding infrastructure.
Oracle executive Clay Magouyrk recently told analysts that first-quarter fiscal 2027 cloud delivery capacity was “approaching one gigawatt,” underscoring the scale of the company’s ongoing data center buildout.
While Oracle has attempted to offset spending pressures through workforce reductions and restructuring initiatives, investors remain focused on cash generation.
The company reduced its headcount by roughly 13% during fiscal 2026, eliminating about 21,000 positions and ending the year with approximately 141,000 employees worldwide.
Restructuring and related charges climbed sharply to $1.84 billion, representing a nearly fourfold increase from the prior year.
Yet those cost-saving measures have done little to alleviate concerns surrounding profitability. Oracle ended fiscal 2026 with negative free cash flow of approximately $23.7 billion, highlighting the financial strain associated with its aggressive expansion plans.
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