Oracle Corporation disclosed a sweeping equity and debt financing plan earlier this week, outlining how the company intends to fund expansion of its Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) business throughout calendar year 2026. The announcement, posted on February 1, sets out a $45–$50 billion capital-raising target aimed at meeting contracted demand from large cloud customers as OCI scales globally.
Oracle said it plans to split the financing roughly evenly between equity and debt to preserve an investment-grade balance sheet. On the equity side, the company expects to raise about half of the total through a mix of equity-linked securities and common equity, including a mandatory convertible preferred issuance and a newly authorized at-the-market (ATM) program of up to $20 billion, deployed flexibly based on market conditions.
The remaining funding will come from a single issuance of investment-grade senior unsecured bonds early in 2026. Oracle stated it does not anticipate additional bond offerings during the calendar year. The board of directors has approved the plan, which the company says aligns capital allocation with long-term OCI growth while maintaining transparency with investors.
- Targeted gross proceeds of $45–$50 billion during calendar year 2026
- Approximately 50% from equity, including mandatory convertible preferred securities and up to $20 billion via an ATM program
- Approximately 50% from a single senior unsecured, investment-grade bond issuance
- Funding earmarked for OCI capacity expansion tied to contracted demand
- Customers cited include AMD, Meta, NVIDIA, OpenAI, TikTok, xAI, and others
- Goldman Sachs & Co. LLC to lead the bond offering; Citigroup to lead the equity offerings
“We are raising money to build additional capacity to meet the contracted demand from our largest Oracle Cloud Infrastructure customers,” the company said, adding that the plan reflects a commitment to investment-grade discipline, balance-sheet strength, and long-term growth of OCI.
🌐 Analysis
Oracle’s financing plan underscores the capital intensity of hyperscale cloud build-outs as AI training and inference workloads drive demand for dedicated capacity. The move places Oracle alongside hyperscalers such as Microsoft, Amazon, and Google, which have all signaled sustained multiyear capex cycles tied to AI infrastructure, while competitors including Meta and xAI increasingly rely on a mix of owned and partner cloud capacity.







