Oracle Earnings Heated Up Its Stock—But Couldn't Spark an AI Rally

Key Takeaways

  • Shares of Oracle soared on Wednesday after a strong earnings report that signaled AI demand remains healthy, boosting semiconductor stocks.
  • Signs of strong AI demand, however, were not enough for the broader market—and most AI stocks—to overcome headwinds from soaring oil prices.

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AI optimism can only do so much for this stock market.

Oracle (ORCL) stock soared Wednesday after the software and cloud computing giant topped quarterly earnings estimates and upped its revenue guidance. Oracle’s backlog—the financial metric that cemented its place in the AI conversation last year—grew $29 billion sequentially. That reinvigorated investor interest in the shares, though it didn’t do as much for a broader market already up to its eyeballs in risk.

The company’s latest quarter should lay the foundation for regaining investor trust after the last one gave them less confidence "in the company’s ability to execute (and finance) to an aggressive set of targets,” wrote Morgan Stanley analysts Wednesday. Investors grew wary of Oracle stock last year as they debated whether the company’s growth was too dependent on one big, unprofitable customer—OpenAI. They also worried the company would need to bury itself in debt to convert its backlog into revenue.

Why This Matters

AI optimism has repeatedly helped propel the stock market through thickets of uncertainty over the past few years. But Oracle’s strong results were failing to infuse markets with bullishness on Wednesday, suggesting the accumulation of economic and geopolitical headwinds has raised the bar for AI stocks.

Oracle’s results reassured Wall Street that demand for its AI infrastructure is broad. The company raised its 2027 fiscal year revenue guidance to $90 billion from $85 billion in October. “It’s worth noting that the better outlook was not attributed to any single AI enterprise deal, rather multiple contracts,” wrote Bank of America analysts on Wednesday. “This suggests Oracle is benefitting from ramping AI adoption in the broader enterprise segment.”

Oracle’s guidance signaled to Wall Street that demand for cloud computing and AI services is still strong, boosting the shares of companies with the greatest exposure to the AI boom. The PHLX Semiconductor Index (SOX) was recently up 0.6% while the broader market fell. Shares of memory technology firms Micron (MU) and Sandisk (SNDK) were recently up 3 about 4% and 6%, respectively, while chip design giants Nvidia (NVDA) and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) were marginally higher. (Follow along with Investopedia’s live markets coverage here.)

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But the report failed to boost AI stocks outside of the chip industry. Nuclear power providers Constellation Energy Corp. (CEG) and Vistra (VST) were down about 5% and 3%, respectively, on Wednesday. Specialty glass makers Amphenol (APH) and Corning (GLW), shares of which have been buoyed by data center demand for fiber optic technology, were also trading in the red.

The optimism was also contained Wednesday by the litany of geopolitical and economic risks lashing the stock market of late. The Dow has fallen more than 3% since the U.S. and Israel launched strikes in Iran late last month. Those strikes have prompted one of the most acute energy crises in decades, with oil prices up about 30% amid a near-complete Iranian shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of the world’s oil flows every day.

Investors fear that sharply higher oil prices, if sustained, will slow economic growth and aggravate inflation that’s already running above the Federal Reserve’s target. Resurgent inflation, they worry, could tie the central bank’s hands if it needs to come to the rescue of an increasingly shaky labor market.

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