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Oracle shares rose 8% in after-hours trading Tuesday after the firm posted strong cloud-server rental growth in the February fiscal quarter, line with its earlier projections. It also raised its projected revenue for the fiscal year that starts in June by about 1% to $90 billion. The disclosures may allay some concerns about the enterprise firm’s ability to quickly transform itself into a provider of AI cloud servers to OpenAI, Meta and other large developers. The firm also said some of its customers are buying their own chips, lessening Oracle’s capital requirements as it builds data center campuses. The buildout has depleted Oracle’s cash reserves, prompting the company to raise tens of billions of dollars this year. The firm burned $11 billion in the February 2026 quarter, up about $1 billion from its cash
burn in the prior quarter. Oracle co-CEO Clay Magouyrk said during a call with investors that the firm delivered 400 megawatts of capacity in the quarter, and that 90% of that capacity was delivered on time. He also said gross margins of that business were 32%, in line with its expectations of its gross margins being between 30% and 40%. Even with the bump following the Tuesday earnings report, Oracle shares are down 50% since September of last year, when it disclosed large expected payments from OpenAI and other AI cloud customers. Investors have since grown skeptical of customers’ ability to pay Oracle and Oracle’s ability to raise enough capital to develop facilities to achieve its sky-high revenue targets. Oracle’s cloud server-rental revenue grew 84% year-over-year to $4.9 billion in the February
quarter. That growth rate was 16 percentage points higher than in the November 2025 quarter and 61 percentage points higher than cloud growth in the February 2025 quarter. Oracle’s cloud revenue is about six times smaller than that of market leader Amazon Web services. Oracle said it had $553 billion in remaining performance obligations—a metric reflecting expected revenue—up around $30 billion from three months earlier. Oracle said most of the increase between quarters was related to large scale AI contracts and that Oracle won’t need to raise additional money to support the projects. “Most of the equipment needed is either funded upfront via customer prepayments so Oracle can purchase the [Nvidia graphics processing units], or the customer buys the GPUs and supplies them to Oracle,” the firm said. Oracle said its over revenue in the February quarter grew 22% from the same period last year to $17.2 billion. Oracle still expects its fiscal year 2026 revenue to be $67 billion and for its capital expenditures to be $50 billion.
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