Following the release of its Oracle Q3 earnings for fiscal 2026, the company reported stronger-than-expected results, driving its stock price up as much as 14% to $177.76. The tech giant posted $17.19 billion in revenue and raised its fiscal 2027 guidance to $90 billion. These results eased investor fears regarding the tech industry’s massive investments in artificial intelligence infrastructure.
Shares of Oracle experienced significant premarket gains following the Tuesday earnings release. Before the report, the tech company’s stock had been volatile, trading down 17% year-to-date in 2026. Oracle delivered earnings per share of $1.79, easily surpassing Wall Street’s estimates of $1.70 on $16.9 billion in expected revenue.
Cloud and AI Infrastructure Drive Record Growth
Total cloud revenue jumped 44% year-over-year to $8.914 billion. Within that segment, cloud infrastructure revenue surged 84% to $4.888 billion, fueled heavily by demand for AI training and inferencing. Additionally, multicloud database revenue saw a massive 531% increase as enterprise customers rapidly shifted workloads into hybrid cloud environments.
Company executives highlighted that this quarter marked the first instance in more than a decade and a half where both organic total revenue and non-GAAP earnings per share expanded by at least 20% simultaneously. Oracle noted in its earnings statement that the market demand for cloud computing dedicated to AI inferencing and training still heavily outpaces the company’s available supply.
Oracle CEO Clay Magouyrk stated that despite the capital-intensive nature of building AI infrastructure, the company has optimized its operating model to maintain profitability. Remaining performance obligations reached $553 billion, representing a 325% year-over-year increase that secures a massive pipeline of contracted future revenue from large-scale AI customers.
Strategies for Managing Data Center Spending
To manage its massive data center buildout and preserve cash flow, Oracle is employing a “bring your own chips” model. This strategy requires certain customers to cover the upfront costs of AI hardware. The company is also actively diversifying its hardware supply chain, utilizing processors from Cerebras alongside those from Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices.
A significant driver of Oracle’s infrastructure business is its relationship with OpenAI, which is connected to the massive $300 billion Stargate cloud deal. While this relationship underscores Oracle’s role as a compute backbone for AI companies, it also introduces concentration risk by heavily relying on a single major customer relationship.
To support its aggressive expansion, Oracle successfully executed a $50 billion financing plan combining debt and equity, which was oversubscribed by institutional investors. Non-current debt has now climbed to $124.7 billion.
Restructuring and Potential Workforce Reductions
Despite the strong financial performance, Oracle faces pressure regarding its aggressive spending. The company recorded a negative free cash flow of $24.736 billion on a trailing basis. This shortfall is a direct result of pouring $48.25 billion into capital expenditures as Oracle aggressively expands its data center capacity.
To improve efficiency and preserve cash for its data center strategy, Oracle is preparing for potential workforce reductions. The database company allocated an additional $500 million for restructuring costs, increasing its total restructuring budget to $2.1 billion for the current fiscal year. Oracle has already spent approximately $982 million of these funds, mostly on severance, leaving about $1.1 billion for further workforce adjustments.
Reports suggest that upcoming workforce reductions could impact between 12% and 18% of Oracle’s global staff. Management pointed to advancements in AI coding tools as a catalyst for efficiency, explaining to investors that these technologies allow teams to develop more software rapidly with fewer employees. Between August and September, Oracle eliminated over 3,000 positions, which reportedly wiped out an entire middle management tier within the sales and marketing departments.
Wall Street Reacts with Relief
The broader tech sector viewed Oracle’s third-quarter results as a major relief following a December 2025 report that had sparked fears of companies overspending on AI data centers. Analysts at Bank of America observed that the company’s improved financial outlook was driven by multiple contracts rather than a single large enterprise deal, signaling widespread AI adoption across various enterprise sectors.
Deutsche Bank analysts kept their Buy rating on the stock, noting that Oracle delivered a blended 32% gross margin across its AI capacity for the quarter. This figure exceeded the company’s 30% benchmark and helped alleviate concerns regarding the long-term profitability of AI infrastructure investments.
