New York, January 19, 2026, 10:39 EST — Market closed
Oracle Corporation shares (ORCL) ended Friday’s session up 0.7%, closing at $191.09. The next update for investors comes Tuesday when U.S. markets resume trading following the Martin Luther King Jr. Day break. (Investopedia)
Investors hit the brakes amid a bondholder lawsuit accusing Oracle of not disclosing how much extra debt it would rack up to fund an AI expansion linked to its OpenAI deal. According to the suit, investors snapped up $18 billion in Oracle notes and bonds on Sept. 25—two weeks after Oracle unveiled its $300 billion, five-year OpenAI contract—before the company later sought $38 billion in loans to build two data centers. Oracle declined to comment. The shares dropped roughly 5% when the lawsuit was filed. By November, the company reportedly had about $108 billion in outstanding notes and borrowings, according to the complaint. (Reuters)
Credit markets are now in focus, not just the equity tape. Barclays analysts predict U.S. corporate bond issuance will hit $2.46 trillion in 2026, driven largely by AI hyperscaler spending — the major cloud giants building vast data centers. BofA Securities notes the top five hyperscalers — Amazon, Alphabet’s Google, Meta, Microsoft, and Oracle — issued $121 billion in U.S. corporate bonds in 2025 and may borrow around $140 billion annually for the next three years. Meanwhile, MUFG reports that Oracle’s five-year credit default swap spreads have more than tripled since its bond sale last September. (Reuters)
Oracle announced it is deepening its partnership with the UK Ministry of Defence by shifting legacy systems to Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI). Victoria Cope, the ministry’s commercial director, called the OCI deal a boost to the “long standing strategic relationship” between MoD and Oracle. Jason Rees, senior vice president of Technology Engineering at Oracle EMEA, added that moving workloads to OCI will enable faster, large-scale operations. (Oracle)
A Form 4 filed Friday revealed that Douglas Kehring, Oracle’s EVP and principal financial officer, sold 35,000 shares at $194.89 each on Jan. 15, using a Rule 10b5-1 plan. Another Form 144 valued the transaction at roughly $6.82 million. These 10b5-1 plans schedule trades ahead of time to help avoid accusations of insider trading. (Cloudfront)
U.S. stocks finished Friday almost unchanged after a volatile session ahead of the long weekend, with major indexes posting weekly declines as earnings season got underway. “Historically the middle part of January tends to be pretty choppy,” noted Bruce Zaro, managing director at Granite Wealth Management. (Reuters)
Overseas markets kicked off the week on edge after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened tariffs on eight European countries, sending European stock futures down and dragging U.S. futures lower in early Asian trading. Traders come back Tuesday to gauge how this risk sentiment will hit U.S. tech and cloud stocks. (Reuters)
Oracle faces clear risks: rising credit spreads and persistent equity volatility could push up funding costs and sour sentiment fast. Plus, the ongoing legal battle keeps spotlighting disclosure and balance-sheet concerns, limiting upside momentum.
Shareholders should note Jan. 23 on their calendars — that’s when Oracle plans to pay out its quarterly dividend of 50 cents per share, as detailed in a December filing. (SEC)