Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) crashed as much as 14% on Thursday morning after the legacy technology company raised its guidance for AI spending, even as revenue fell short of expectations in its fiscal Q2.
The giant’s $16.06 billion in quarterly revenue missed estimates by some $150 million. Still, ORCL management raised its outlook for capital expenditures to over $50 billion in 2026.
The post-earnings sell-off marks Oracle’s largest since January, lowering its market cap by more than $100 billion in a single session. That said, Oracle stock is still up some 15% year-to-date.
Why is CAPEX guidance concerning for Oracle stock?
Oracle’s earnings release revealed a troubling mismatch: revenue growth came in below consensus – yet management guided for accelerated spending on artificial intelligence.
The multinational has earmarked billions for cloud infrastructure investments, and yes, that underscores its ambition to emerge as a key AI infrastructure provider.
But its pace of spending clearly isn’t aligned with revenue growth, which just so happens to be a feature of bubble-like behaviour.
Investors are becoming anxious that Oracle may not be able to deliver proportional returns, especially given its debt load and tightening fresh cash flow.
The concern is that the giant is chasing growth at any cost, leaving ORCL shareholders exposed if AI demand normalizes or fails to scale as expected.
How to play ORCL shares on the post-earnings decline?
The AI spending-related concerns are highly rational since Oracle is meaningfully more leveraged than many of its cloud peers (Amazon, Microsoft, and Google).
Its debt load already sits at north of $100 billion – and it’s fair to assume that it could grow further as it finances this massive buildout.
Still, Bank of America’s senior analyst Justin Post dubs the post-earnings dip an “opportunity” for long-term investors, citing the firm’s strong backlog of cloud contracts and positioning in AI workloads.
In his research note, Post expressed confidence in Oracle’s “ability to transform into an AI compute hyperscaler,” – and while the near-term may remain volatile, he believes the sentiment and estimate will “reset higher” over time.
BofA maintains a $300 price target on Oracle shares, indicating potential upside of more than 60% from here. A 1.04% dividend yield makes them even more attractive as a long-term holding.
Oracle’s path forward depends entirely on its AI strategy
ORCL stock’s sharp decline underscores the tension between AI hype and financial reality.
Mounting CAPEX without matching revenue growth raises legitimate concerns – yet heavyweight analysts believe much of the downside is already priced in.
For investors, the decision hinges on risk appetite: those wary of bubble-like spending may prefer to wait, while believers in Oracle’s AI infrastructure strategy could view the current dip as a rare chance to buy at a discount.
Either way, ORCL shares’ trajectory into 2026 will be defined by whether Oracle can turn its AI spending spree into tangible, profitable growth.
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