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Oracle Delivers Big AI Numbers—But with Escalating CapEx and Guidance Pressure

Oracle posted strong fiscal Q2 2026 results as cloud momentum accelerated and large AI-related commitments drove Remaining Performance Obligations (RPO) to a record $523 billion, up 438% year-over-year. Revenue climbed 14% to $16.1 billion and cloud services rose 34%, but the company also reported a sharp increase in capital expenditures tied to its global AI data center build-out—$12 billion in Q2 alone—and signaled that full-year FY26 CapEx will be roughly $15 billion higher than previously forecast. While operational metrics were solid, Oracle held its FY26 revenue outlook steady and pushed more upside into FY27, trends that contributed to a cautious market reaction following the earnings release. GAAP EPS rose 91% to $2.10, boosted by a $2.7 billion gain from Oracle’s divestiture of its Ampere stake.

Management signaled a strategic pivot toward full chip neutrality, moving away from designing proprietary processors and emphasizing partnerships with NVIDIA and other CPU and GPU suppliers. Executives also highlighted rapid expansion of Oracle’s global data center footprint, with 211 live and planned regions and 72 multicloud data centers being embedded inside AWS, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Azure. Oracle reported multicloud database revenue jumping 817%—its fastest-growing segment—driven by customers running Oracle databases across multiple cloud platforms.

Oracle also spotlighted AI as a catalyst across its database, analytics, and applications stack. The company sees its greatest opportunity in embedding AI into core workflows such as financial services, logistics, and healthcare. With all top five AI models hosted on Oracle Cloud, executives emphasized advantages in performance, automation, and operational efficiency.

• Q2 revenue reached $16.1B, up 14% in USD.

• Cloud revenue hit $8.0B, up 34%.

• Cloud Infrastructure (IaaS) revenue grew to $4.1B, up 68%.

• Cloud Applications (SaaS) revenue reached $3.9B, up 11%.

• Fusion Cloud ERP revenue rose to $1.1B, up 18%.

• NetSuite ERP revenue reached $1.0B, up 13%.

• RPO surged to $523B, up 438% year-over-year.

• GAAP EPS climbed 91% to $2.10; Non-GAAP EPS rose 54% to $2.26.

• Operating cash flow for the past twelve months totaled $22.3B, up 10%.

• Oracle now counts 211 active and planned cloud regions and is more than halfway through deploying 72 multicloud data centers inside AWS, Google Cloud, and Azure.

• Multicloud database revenue grew 817% year-over-year.

• Oracle’s exit from Ampere reflects a long-term move to chip neutrality.

“Oracle sold Ampere because we no longer think it is strategic for us to continue designing, manufacturing and using our own chips in our cloud datacenters,” said Oracle Chairman and CTO, Larry Ellison. “We are now committed to a policy of chip neutrality where we work closely with all our CPU and GPU suppliers. Of course, we will continue to buy the latest GPUs from NVIDIA, but we need to be prepared and able to deploy whatever chips our customers want to buy. There are going to be a lot of changes in AI technology over the next few years and we must remain agile in response to those changes.”

“Oracle is very good at building and running high-performance and cost-efficient cloud datacenters,” said Oracle CEO, Clay Magouyrk. “For years Oracle has been investing in AI and building autonomous cloud software. Oracle’s Autonomous Database and Autonomous Linux have been key to reducing human labor and human error in our datacenters. Because our datacenters are highly automated, we can build and run more of them. Oracle has over 211 live and planned regions worldwide—more than any of our cloud competitors. We are more than halfway through building 72 Oracle Multicloud datacenters to be embedded throughout the Amazon, Google and Microsoft clouds. We are committed to Cloud Neutrality because we believe that our customers should be able to run their Oracle databases in any cloud they choose. That strategy is definitely paying off. Our Multicloud database business is our fastest growing business—up 817% in Q2.”

Oracle Q2 FY26 Investor Call Highlights

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