Today: 20 May 2026
Oracle Stock (NYSE: ORCL) Heads Into Year-End With AI Capex in Focus: Latest Price, News, Forecasts, and What to Watch Before Monday’s Open
27 December 2025
7 mins read

Oracle Stock (NYSE: ORCL) Heads Into Year-End With AI Capex in Focus: Latest Price, News, Forecasts, and What to Watch Before Monday’s Open

Oracle Corporation (NYSE: ORCL) is closing out the week at the center of a renewed Wall Street debate: is the company’s AI-and-cloud infrastructure spending spree the setup for a multi-year growth surge—or a near-term margin and balance-sheet stress test that will keep the stock volatile into 2026?

As of 7:29 p.m. ET on Friday, Dec. 26, 2025, U.S. stock exchanges have already finished the regular session, and investors are digesting fresh Oracle headlines and recent earnings guidance while positioning for the last trading days of the year.

ORCL shares were trading around $198 in the latest available quote, reflecting modest movement versus the prior close—though liquidity and price discovery can be thinner into the evening and during year-end trading.

The market backdrop: thin post-holiday trading, but “AI nerves” still matter

Friday’s session was quiet and low-volume across Wall Street, with major U.S. indices edging slightly lower in a subdued post-Christmas tape—yet still near elevated levels after a strong run into the holidays.

Seasonality is also in play: the market is in the “Santa Claus rally” window (the final five trading days of the year plus the first two of the new year), a period often watched for sentiment into January—though it’s never a guarantee. Reuters+1

For Oracle specifically, the broader “AI trade” has been sensitive to any sign that massive infrastructure spending isn’t translating cleanly into near-term profits. Earlier this month, Oracle’s outlook helped revive “AI bubble” chatter and weighed on tech sentiment, according to Reuters’ market coverage. Reuters

Oracle stock: why investors are still debating the story

Oracle’s narrative has rarely been this polarized:

  • On one side: Oracle is building a cloud and AI infrastructure platform with enormous contracted demand (captured in its backlog metrics), with accelerating growth in key cloud segments.
  • On the other: that opportunity requires huge capital expenditures, and investors want clearer proof that returns, margins, and financing risks are manageable—especially given the scale of obligations tied to mega-customers.

Even in bullish camps, the debate is less about whether AI demand exists and more about execution timing and capital intensity.

Earnings recap: $523B in RPO meets a capex shock

Oracle’s most recent quarterly print (fiscal 2026 Q2, released Dec. 10) delivered eye-catching backlog growth alongside mixed near-term fundamentals.

What Oracle reported (fiscal 2026 Q2)

Oracle said:

  • Remaining Performance Obligations (RPO): $523 billion, up 438% year over year
  • Total revenue: $16.1 billion, up 14%
  • Cloud revenue (IaaS + SaaS): $8.0 billion, up 34%
  • Cloud infrastructure (IaaS) revenue: $4.1 billion, up 68%
  • Non-GAAP EPS: $2.26, up 54%
  • The quarter also included a $2.7 billion pre-tax gain related to the sale of Oracle’s interest in Ampere, which Oracle cited as positively impacting EPS

Oracle also emphasized “cloud neutrality” and multicloud momentum—stating it has over 211 live and planned regions worldwide, and that its “multicloud database business” was up 817% in Q2 (Oracle’s phrasing). Oracle Investor Relations

The guidance and spending point that rattled the stock

In Reuters’ reporting on the results, Oracle’s sales and profit outlook missed analyst estimates, and the company said fiscal 2026 capex is expected to be about $15 billion higher than the $35 billion figure it gave in September—implying roughly $50 billion in capex expectations.

That capex reset is a key reason ORCL has traded like an “AI infrastructure” proxy rather than a traditional enterprise software name.

OpenAI exposure: the upside is enormous—and so is the scrutiny

Oracle’s AI credibility (and some of its stock volatility) has been tied to the market’s interpretation of its relationship with OpenAI.

Reuters previously reported that OpenAI signed a contract to purchase $300 billion in computing power over roughly five years from Oracle, citing a Wall Street Journal report.

In a Reuters preview ahead of Oracle’s earnings, Bernstein analyst Mark Moerdler highlighted the concentration risk, calling the OpenAI data-center contract “unprecedented single customer revenue exposure.” Reuters

The same Reuters preview also noted Oracle had sought to reassure investors by pointing to broader demand—referencing Oracle’s expectation that cloud infrastructure revenue could reach $166 billion in fiscal 2030, and citing Oracle commentary about new bookings beyond OpenAI, including a $20 billion deal with Meta.

Data center timing risk: Oracle pushed back on delay chatter

Execution risk around data centers became a headline in mid-December. Reuters reported Oracle denied a Bloomberg News report that suggested some OpenAI-related data centers had been pushed to 2028, with Oracle stating milestones required to meet contractual commitments “remain on track.” Reuters

Reuters also quoted Bob O’Donnell (TECHnalysis Research) noting that concerns about construction delays, power availability, and other practical constraints have become more important to investors as they scrutinize AI spending payoffs.

The credit and funding question: Wall Street is watching Oracle’s bonds, too

Equity investors aren’t the only ones pricing Oracle risk. Bond investors and credit watchers have been tracking how Oracle funds an AI buildout that could reshape its financial profile.

Reuters reported in November that Oracle bonds sold off amid investor concerns, describing Oracle as having roughly $104 billion in debt outstanding (including $18 billion in bonds) while spending heavily to build cloud and AI infrastructure.

That same Reuters piece included commentary from Lisa Shalett, CIO at Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, describing a dynamic where major tech firms try to sustain buybacks while also ramping capex—leading to more borrowing.

Credit analysts cited by Reuters also framed the bond volatility as pressure rather than panic—Gimme Credit’s Stu Novick pointed to “selling pressure,” while Chilton Trust’s Tim Horan suggested it looked more like a “bump in the road” than a systemic break. Reuters

Separately, Reuters reported that AI spending helped drive record tech debt issuance in 2025 and noted signs of strain in certain credit metrics as leverage rose faster than earnings at many firms—context that matters when a company like Oracle is spending aggressively.

Additional Oracle headlines investors are tracking: TikTok and Ellison-related news flow

While Oracle’s core valuation is still anchored to cloud, software, and infrastructure economics, investors have also been reacting to “adjacent” headlines:

TikTok U.S. joint venture angle

Reuters reported in December that ByteDance signed a deal to form a joint venture structure for TikTok’s U.S. operations, with Oracle among major investors, as part of efforts to address U.S. national security concerns.

Barron’s has also discussed Oracle’s role in the TikTok arrangement and how it fits into Oracle’s year-end narrative, alongside broader discussion of financial and strategic uncertainty.

Larry Ellison/Paramount-Warner deal coverage

Reuters reported Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison provided a $40.4 billion personal guarantee related to Paramount Skydance’s bid to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery. While that’s not an Oracle corporate action, it has been part of the broader news cycle surrounding Oracle and the Ellison family—something some investors monitor for sentiment and headline risk.

What Wall Street forecasts say about ORCL stock right now

Analyst targets are widely dispersed—reflecting just how uncertain the market is about the “capex now, payoff later” arc.

Two commonly cited aggregations show a broad range of outcomes:

  • TipRanks shows an average 12-month price target in the low $300s, with highs around $400 and lows around $180 (based on the analysts it tracks).
  • TradingView similarly shows a broad spread of analyst targets, again clustering around the high-$200s to low-$300s on average (depending on contributor set and update timing).

Investors should treat these as directional rather than definitive. The practical takeaway isn’t the exact target—it’s what the dispersion implies: the Street is still debating (1) the durability of OCI growth, (2) the pace at which AI contracts turn into recognized revenue, and (3) whether Oracle can scale without unacceptable balance-sheet stress.

Key “tell” metrics to watch in the next Oracle updates

For investors trying to separate signal from noise, the market is likely to stay focused on a short list of metrics and disclosures:

  1. OCI (Cloud Infrastructure) growth rate: Oracle reported IaaS growth of 68% in Q2. Sustained high growth supports the bull case, but the market may demand proof it’s profitable growth.
  2. RPO conversion and mix: the $523B RPO number is massive—but investors will scrutinize how fast it converts into revenue and whether it’s concentrated in a few mega-customers.
  3. Capex trajectory and financing models: Oracle has been talking about alternative models (including customers “bringing their own chips” and vendor capacity arrangements) to reduce upfront capex burden. Reuters
  4. AI data center execution: any additional commentary on buildout progress, power availability, construction timelines, and supplier constraints can move the stock quickly.
  5. Credit-market signals: bond pricing and CDS costs have been part of the narrative; if those stabilize, equity volatility can ease.

If you’re holding ORCL: what to know before the next session

The next regular session

The next regular U.S. equity session is Monday, Dec. 29, with normal NYSE hours (9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET).

Macro events that can move rates (and therefore high-capex stories like Oracle)

Year-end weeks can still see sharp moves on thin liquidity—especially when rate-sensitive growth stocks react to economic data.

The New York Fed’s economic indicators calendar lists, for Monday, Dec. 29 (ET):

  • Advance International Trade in Goods (8:30 a.m.)
  • NAR Pending Home Sales Index (10:00 a.m.)
  • Dallas Fed Manufacturing Survey (10:30 a.m.)

Even if Oracle-specific news is quiet, shifts in yields and risk appetite can influence ORCL given the market’s focus on capex, debt, and long-duration AI monetization.

Year-end market mechanics to keep in mind

  • Liquidity can be thinner into the last week of December, which can amplify moves in either direction.
  • The market holiday schedule matters: the NYSE and Nasdaq are closed on New Year’s Day (Jan. 1, 2026).
  • In fixed income, SIFMA’s recommendations indicate an early close (2:00 p.m. ET) on Dec. 31, 2025 for certain markets—relevant because Oracle’s story is partly a credit story right now.

One practical shareholder note: Oracle’s dividend timeline

Oracle’s board declared a $0.50 quarterly cash dividend, with a record date of Jan. 9, 2026 and payment date of Jan. 23, 2026.

Next major Oracle catalyst: the next earnings window

Oracle’s Investor Relations FAQ says fiscal Q3 2026 earnings will be announced in mid-March 2026 (timing that matters for anyone planning catalysts beyond the day-to-day volatility).

Bottom line for Oracle stock heading into Monday

Oracle stock is trading in a “prove it” phase: the company has put up enormous contracted demand and strong cloud infrastructure growth, but Wall Street wants more clarity on profitability, funding, and execution as capex ramps toward roughly $50 billion for fiscal 2026.

For Monday’s open, investors will likely be watching two things above all:

  • Any incremental headlines on AI data center buildout and customer timelines (because the market has been hypersensitive to delays).
  • Signals from credit and rates (because the funding narrative is now inseparable from the equity story).

Stock Market Today

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    May 20, 2026, 1:29 PM EDT. Private equity and private credit are established investment sectors. However, recent shifts now allow broader investor access to these private funding markets. Experts urge caution, highlighting increased risks and complex valuations. Investors need to assess liquidity challenges and market volatility before committing capital. Understanding the nuances of private markets is crucial amid evolving financial landscapes.

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