New York, March 1, 2026, 11:02 EST — Market closed
- Oracle slipped 3.3% Friday, ending the session at $145.40.
- Tech shares slid broadly, with new OpenAI funding headlines shaping Monday’s opening mood.
- Eyes are now on Oracle’s mid-March earnings and any details it shares about its 2026 funding strategy.
Oracle Corp dropped 3.3% Friday, finishing the session at $145.40. That slip puts the software giant in a weaker spot heading into the weekend with markets shut. Investing.com
This drop is drawing attention: Oracle is right in the thick of Wall Street’s ongoing argument about artificial intelligence—namely, who’s footing the bill for all those data centers, and when the returns start rolling in. U.S. markets don’t reopen until Monday, leaving investors with plenty of time to chew over the latest AI-spending storylines.
Oracle wasn’t the only name under pressure Friday. The Nasdaq shed 0.92% and the S&P 500 lost 0.43% as investors adjusted valuations across high-flying tech, despite Nvidia delivering strong numbers. “The semiconductor group had ‘priced in a lot of good news’ and ‘it’s time for a breather,’” said Talley Leger, chief market strategist at The Wealth Consulting Group. Reuters
OpenAI grabbed headlines Friday, announcing a $110 billion funding round that bumps its valuation to $840 billion. Amazon, Nvidia, and SoftBank are leading the funding. Amazon’s AWS also picked up the role of exclusive third-party cloud provider for OpenAI Frontier. But for OpenAI’s APIs, Microsoft Azure isn’t going anywhere; it stays on as the exclusive cloud provider, according to Reuters. Reuters
This is a key issue for Oracle, which goes up against rivals in the battle for rented computing power. Investors track every move as AI workloads and partnerships shuffle across cloud providers. As OpenAI’s cloud connections grow, the spotlight remains on whether AI demand is fanning out or clustering further as the AI buildout picks up speed.
Oracle has already made clear that funding is central to its plans. Back in early February, the company projected it would need to raise between $45 billion and $50 billion in 2026 to fuel the growth of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. This includes an at-the-market program for up to $20 billion—allowing Oracle to gradually sell shares—and a single, investment-grade bond issuance set for the start of the year. Oracle Investor Relations
But there’s obvious risk here. If demand doesn’t show up as fast as Oracle hopes—or if borrowing gets pricier—all that big spending could squeeze margins and drain cash flow. Plus, with Oracle stock now standing in for the whole AI investment trend, any wobble in that trade tends to hit shares hard and fast.
Earnings are up next for Oracle. The company has scheduled its third-quarter fiscal 2026 report for mid-March. Investors want more than just the top-line figures this time—they’ll be watching for updates on cloud demand and capital spending plans. Oracle Investor Relations
Most market calendars are pointing to a March 9 release after the close, leaving traders with a narrow window to adjust positions before New York trading resumes Monday. Yahoo Finance