Today: 26 April 2026
Why Oracle stock is down today: Stargate doubts and tariff turmoil hit ORCL
23 February 2026
2 mins read

Why Oracle stock is down today: Stargate doubts and tariff turmoil hit ORCL

NEW YORK, Feb 23, 2026, 11:08 ET — Regular session in progress.

Oracle Corp dropped roughly 5% Monday, slipping to $140.67. Shares moved between $140.43 and $147.23 during the session. The pullback came after The Information said OpenAI’s massive $500 billion “Stargate” computing project hit a snag, citing disagreements over the project’s buildout. The Information

Timing is crucial here. Oracle has staked its reputation on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) as a major player in “AI infrastructure” — the underlying data centers and servers needed to train hefty models — and markets haven’t hesitated to penalize the stock over potential holdups. On Feb. 1, Oracle outlined plans to raise $45 billion to $50 billion in gross cash proceeds in calendar 2026 to fuel OCI expansion, splitting the total about equally between equity and equity-linked securities and a one-off bond offering. The company also cleared a new at-the-market program for up to $20 billion, allowing it to gradually sell shares directly into the market at going prices. Oracle

Oracle shares slid in a market already shifting into risk-off mode. U.S. equities pulled back, with pressure building on big tech and growth stocks after President Donald Trump’s fresh 15% tariff triggered renewed trade jitters. The move came on the heels of a Supreme Court decision that rolled back most of his previous tariffs. “The relief rally from Friday may be premature,” warned Thomas Hayes, who chairs Great Hill Capital LLC. Morning trading saw the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq all in the red. Reuters

Stargate has played a central role in linking Oracle to the AI infrastructure story. Back in September, OpenAI called Stargate its main U.S. data-center initiative with Oracle and SoftBank, outlining a $500 billion, 10-gigawatt plan. “AI can only fulfill its promise if we build the compute,” OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said then. Oracle’s Clay Magouyrk, in the same update, talked about moves to “expand OCI’s footprint” as demand ticks up. OpenAI

Across the board, traders face a murky tariff picture, lacking any firm schedule or exemptions. “The tariff landscape is now more uncertain than before,” National Australia Bank’s Rodrigo Catril told Reuters, a setup that usually knocks pricey software shares off balance first. Reuters

Oracle knows this pattern. Massive data-center investments drain cash upfront, but the corresponding contract income drips in over time. That mismatch tends to make shares twitchy—sometimes all it takes is a slim set of numbers.

Oracle faces stiff competition in the cloud space, where giants like Amazon and Microsoft dominate. If OpenAI-related spending shows any signs of slowing, that could easily shake broader cloud demand expectations, even when today’s spark comes from just one company.

The downside isn’t straightforward. The Information’s report isn’t a regulatory filing, and big infrastructure projects often stall, restart, or swap out partners—without necessarily shifting near-term customer usage in a linear way.

Investors are waiting to hear from Oracle or its partners, and are looking for clues on how soon Oracle moves on its planned funding options. Tariff headlines? Still the big swing factor, driving much of the recent price action.

Nvidia reports on Wednesday, Feb. 25, setting up the next major test for AI stocks. Wall Street looks to the chipmaker’s numbers for signals on data-center budgets and the speed of AI infrastructure growth. Nvidia’s stock swings tend to jolt other cloud-adjacent players, with Oracle frequently tracking those moves.

Stock Market Today

  • AMD Shares Surge 13.85% on Strong AI Demand and Analyst Upgrade
    April 25, 2026, 11:10 PM EDT. Shares of Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) jumped 13.85% on Friday after D.A. Davidson analyst Gil Luria upgraded the stock to buy and raised the price target to $375. Luria cited Intel's strong earnings report highlighting robust data center chip sales as a sign of rising demand for high-speed central processing units (CPUs) powering artificial intelligence (AI) agents. The shift towards agentic AI workloads is boosting server CPU demand, benefiting AMD. Luria also noted that with demand outstripping supply, AMD could increase prices on high-performance CPUs, improving margins and profits. Investors await AMD's Q1 financial results and management's conference call on May 5 for more insights on its AI-driven growth prospects.

Latest article

Lockheed Martin Gets Golden Dome Opening as Profit Worries Bite

Lockheed Martin Gets Golden Dome Opening as Profit Worries Bite

26 April 2026
Lockheed Martin was named among firms awarded up to $3.2 billion for President Trump’s Golden Dome space-based missile interceptor plan, Space Systems Command said. The company reported weaker first-quarter results, with $18 billion in sales and negative free cash flow. Space Force aims to show initial interceptor capability in 2028. Golden Dome’s total cost is projected at $185 billion.
ASML Stock’s AI Boom Has a Catch: TSMC Won’t Rush the $410 Million Machine

ASML Stock’s AI Boom Has a Catch: TSMC Won’t Rush the $410 Million Machine

26 April 2026
ASML shares rose 2.3% in Amsterdam late Friday as the company reported Q1 net sales of €8.8 billion and raised its 2026 sales outlook to up to €40 billion. TSMC, ASML’s top customer, said it would delay adopting ASML’s new High-NA EUV machines, priced at over €350 million each, preferring to extend use of existing tools. ASML aims to deliver at least 60 standard EUV machines in 2026.
Rackspace (RXT) stock back in play as Palantir AI deal meets earnings week
Previous Story

Rackspace (RXT) stock back in play as Palantir AI deal meets earnings week

Eli Lilly stock pops after Novo trial miss, new Zepbound pen gets FDA nod
Next Story

Eli Lilly stock pops after Novo trial miss, new Zepbound pen gets FDA nod

Go toTop