Today: 22 June 2026
Oracle Stock Holds After AWS Tie-Up as Investors Reassess the AI Bet

Oracle Stock Holds After AWS Tie-Up as Investors Reassess the AI Bet

Austin, Texas, April 20, 2026, 11:42 CDT

Oracle stock slipped 0.2% to $174.75 on Monday, with investors debating if the company’s expanded partnership with Amazon Web Services will really convert last week’s cloud-networking news into enduring AI-driven revenue. Shares barely budged as the market considered the potential.

It’s a big deal for Oracle, which has poured significant sums into AI data centers while working to reassure investors about its debt load and the speed at which those investments pay off. The company markets its AWS database service as a low-friction option for shifting Oracle workloads onto AWS—aiming to attract clients unwilling to commit fully to Oracle’s cloud.

Multicloud—deploying workloads across multiple cloud platforms—is gaining traction. AWS rolled out Interconnect-multicloud for general use on April 13, naming Google Cloud as the initial launch partner; Microsoft Azure isn’t expected to come on board until sometime in 2026. Oracle’s integration ties into this broader strategy.

Oracle on April 16 announced plans to link Oracle Interconnect to AWS Interconnect-multicloud, targeting a launch later this year in AWS’s U.S. East region, northern Virginia. Nathan Thomas, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure senior vice president, said the move aims to let customers “modernize their applications, unify their data, and unlock new generative AI opportunities.” The company noted OCI already covers 26 interconnected partner cloud regions. Oracle

Oracle’s AI Database@AWS page notes that customers are able to run Oracle database services on AWS, working together with Amazon Bedrock and SageMaker. The company rolled out product updates on April 14, expanding into Paris and Zurich—just ahead of the planned networking launch.

Investors want to see if those connections will actually generate lasting revenue. Back in March, Oracle bumped up its fiscal 2027 revenue goal to $90 billion and revealed a 325% surge in remaining performance obligations, reaching $553 billion in contracted future revenue. “Oracle’s quarter is a beat and a stress test result for the AI trade,” said eMarketer analyst Jacob Bourne. Reuters

Still, shares are a long way from last September’s highs. Oracle changed hands at $174.75 on Monday—about half its record intraday mark of $345.69 set on Sept. 10, 2025, when excitement around OpenAI-related deals sent the stock surging.

The AWS tie-up doesn’t solve the stickier problems. “Simplicity is the top issue here,” Jim Frey of Omdia told TechTarget. Constellation Research’s Holger Mueller flagged data egress fees—costs for shifting data between clouds—as a continuing concern for customers. Power is another headache. Reuters said on April 13 that Oracle increased its Bloom Energy fuel-cell agreement to up to 2.8 gigawatts. Meanwhile, U.S. regulators are eyeing new rules for the surging energy needs of data centers by June. TechTarget

The AI boom still has its doubters. Cognitive scientist and longtime skeptic Gary Marcus didn’t hold back on April 15, writing, “If Oracle actually collects its $300 billion, I will truly be astounded.” That sums up concerns among some investors, who remain unconvinced that cloud hype will turn into real profits. Gary Marcus Substack

Right now, Oracle’s offering is straightforward: businesses can leave their apps running on AWS, but tap into Oracle’s databases and AI services via a private connection. The big question—does this turn into steady revenue, or just spark another swing in the shares—should get some answers once customers start using it later this year.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

Stock Market Today

  • ASX slips as Middle East tensions and WiseTech probe weigh on markets
    June 22, 2026, 2:13 AM EDT. The ASX fell amid renewed Middle East geopolitical tensions that rattled investor confidence. Shares of WiseTech dropped following an Australian Federal Police (AFP) investigation into its governance practices, putting additional strain on the technology sector. The combined impact of international unrest and corporate scrutiny prompted a cautious trading session, reflecting investor sensitivity to both external risks and internal corporate governance issues.

Latest articles

Cognizant (NASDAQ: CTSH) Slides 10% as Nasdaq-100 Exit Nears

Cognizant (NASDAQ: CTSH) Slides 10% as Nasdaq-100 Exit Nears

22 June 2026
Cognizant shares plunged 10.49% to $43.70, erasing $2.4 billion in equity value—more than its $2 billion 2026 buyback target—after Accenture’s narrowed growth outlook, a Berenberg downgrade, and looming Nasdaq-100 removal, even as S&P 500 and Nasdaq rallied; investors now eye Q2 guidance as the next key test.
Pentagon Could Outpace Tech Giants on Small Nuclear Projects

Pentagon Could Outpace Tech Giants on Small Nuclear Projects

22 June 2026
Valar Atomics’ Ward 250 became the first DOE-authorized advanced reactor built outside a national lab to achieve criticality, signaling a shift as U.S. defense demand accelerates small nuclear deployment, with the Army allocating over $2 billion for microreactors—moving the sector from policy to production and raising near-term demand expectations.
AMD Stock Pulls Back From Record High as BofA, Stifel Raise Targets on AI CPU Boom
Previous Story

AMD Stock Pulls Back From Record High as BofA, Stifel Raise Targets on AI CPU Boom

US Stock Market Today: S&P 500, Nasdaq Slip From Records as Oil Spike Tests Wall Street Rally
Next Story

US Stock Market Today: S&P 500, Nasdaq Slip From Records as Oil Spike Tests Wall Street Rally

Go toTop