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Oracle soars after raising annual forecast on robust cloud services demand

Oracle soars after raising annual forecast on robust cloud services demand

NEW YORK: Oracle raised its annual revenue growth forecast on Wednesday, betting on robust demand for its cloud offerings from companies deploying artificial intelligence, sending its shares up more than 7 per cent after the bell.
For fiscal 2026, Oracle expects total revenue to be at least US$67 billion, CEO Safra Catz said on a post-earnings call.
With the new forecast, annual revenue is expected to grow by around 16.7 per cent, compared with Oracle's prior projection of a 15 per cent growth.
"We expect our total cloud growth rate — applications plus infrastructure — will increase from 24 per cent in fiscal year 2025 to over 40 per cent in fiscal year 2026," Catz said.
The company's growth is largely supported by its Oracle Cloud Infrastructure solution and support for AI workloads.
Oracle's confidence in OCI revenue comes with good reason, said Rebecca Wettemann, CEO of industry analyst firm Valoir. "The multi-cloud approach and the increasing reliance of Oracle enterprise application cloud customers on OCI to support their enterprise data needs are important drivers."
The company's willingness and ability to embed generative AI capabilities in its cloud suite of applications at no additional cost have reduced adoption barriers and encouraged experimentation, Wettemann added.
Revenue for the quarter ended May 31 stood at US$15.90 billion, beating analysts' estimate of US$15.59 billion.
Quarterly revenue at Oracle's largest unit, cloud services and license support, came in at US$11.70 billion, a 14 per cent increase from last year.
Excluding items, the company earned US$1.70 per share in the fourth quarter, compared with estimates of US$1.64 apiece.

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Indonesia aims to seal EU free trade agreement in 2026, official says
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The Star

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  • The Star

Indonesia aims to seal EU free trade agreement in 2026, official says

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time4 hours ago

  • The Star

China's top baijiu maker faces sobering reality as austerity trims profits

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Philippines buys 12 FA-50 light combat aircraft from S. Korea; purchase part of ambitious defence modernisation programme

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