Oracle Corporation (NYSE: ORCL)
Company Overview
Oracle has been one of the most dramatically misunderstood AI infrastructure stories of the past two years. Most investors still think of it as the company that sells database software to large enterprises — a slow, expensive, legacy technology vendor living off its installed base. That was the Oracle of 2020. The Oracle reporting Q4 fiscal year 2026 results last night is something entirely different: the company has emerged as the third major AI cloud provider alongside Amazon Web Services and Microsoft Azure, with a $553 billion remaining performance obligations backlog that represents more contracted future revenue than any other enterprise technology company outside the hyperscalers.
Oracle was scheduled to report Q4 FY2026 results after the market close on June 10, with Wall Street expecting revenue of approximately $19.09 billion, representing roughly 20% year-over-year growth, and GAAP EPS of $1.47. The setup heading into last night’s print was among the most consequential in Oracle’s history. In Q3 FY2026, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure delivered $4.9 billion in revenue, up 84% year-over-year, while multicloud database revenue surged 531% and AI infrastructure revenue grew 243%. Management had guided Q4 to total cloud revenue growth of 46%–50% in U.S. dollars and non-GAAP EPS of $1.96–$2.00 — guidance that, if confirmed, would validate Oracle’s claim to be building the AI compute infrastructure that neither AWS nor Azure can supply fast enough. Readers should check this morning’s tape for the confirmed results; what follows is the fundamental case for why this print matters regardless of the one-day move.
Key Technical and Fundamental Drivers
$553 Billion RPO → The Largest AI Infrastructure Backlog Outside the Hyperscalers Oracle’s remaining performance obligations stood at $553 billion at the end of Q3 FY2026 — signed contracts with delivery timelines representing years of future revenue. Q3 alone added $29 billion to the backlog sequentially, on top of Q2’s $68 billion sequential jump, meaning the massive AI-era bookings are still generating fresh paper even as the original Stargate-era deals age. When Larry Ellison says Oracle cannot build data centers fast enough to fulfill demand, this is the number that confirms it is not marketing — it is a genuine operational constraint with contracts behind it.
OCI Cloud → 84% Growth, AI Infrastructure the Engine Oracle Cloud Infrastructure alone posted $4.9 billion in revenue for Q3, up 84% year-over-year, while AI infrastructure revenue within OCI grew 243% year-over-year and multicloud database revenue — Oracle’s database running natively inside AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud — surged 531%. The multicloud database story is the sleeper catalyst: every major AI company building on top of AWS, Azure, or Google Cloud still needs Oracle’s database for transaction-critical workloads, and Oracle now runs natively inside those clouds rather than competing against them. OCI multicloud coverage expanded to 33 Microsoft regions, 14 Google regions, and 8 AWS regions by Q3 exit, with 22 AWS regions targeted by Q4 exit.
$90 Billion FY2027 Revenue Target → Roughly 34% Growth Guided Oracle raised its FY2027 revenue guidance to $90 billion, with analysts expecting Oracle to guide for roughly 34% revenue growth in FY2027 — about twice the FY2026 growth rate. A company of Oracle’s size guiding to a doubling of its growth rate is an extraordinary statement. The FY2026 revenue target was approximately $67 billion with $50 billion in capital expenditures, and the Q4 print last night was the first comprehensive report card on whether that capex is converting into revenue on schedule. If the OCI buildout is delivering on timeline, the $90 billion FY2027 target becomes credible rather than aspirational.
Stargate Partnership → AI Compute Landlord to the Industry Oracle is one of the primary infrastructure partners in Stargate, the $500 billion AI infrastructure joint venture announced earlier in 2026. The partnership gives Oracle a direct pipeline into the most capital-intensive AI buildout in history, with OCI serving as a preferred compute provider for workloads that neither Amazon nor Microsoft can accommodate fast enough. Oracle has secured more than 10 gigawatts of power and data capacity coming online over the next three years, with more than 90% of committed capacity partner-funded — a structure that allows Oracle to scale rapidly without bearing the full balance sheet burden of the buildout.
Q3 First 20%+ Organic Growth in Over 15 Years → Execution Inflection Q3 FY2026 marked the first quarter in more than 15 years where Oracle delivered both organic total revenue and organic non-GAAP EPS growing at or above 20% in U.S. dollars simultaneously. This is not an incremental improvement on a trend — it is a structural break from Oracle’s long history as a low-single-digit growth enterprise software company. The cloud transition that Oracle began a decade ago is now producing the kind of top-line acceleration that was promised but never delivered until now.
Market Takeaway
Oracle’s Q4 FY2026 print is the moment when the company either confirms its transformation into an AI infrastructure landlord or reveals that the backlog is harder to monetize than the narrative suggests. The bull case is historically compelling: a $553 billion RPO, OCI growing at 84%, the multicloud database strategy eliminating the competitive threat from AWS and Azure by running inside their clouds instead of against them, and a Stargate partnership that provides a captive pipeline of AI compute demand for years. Q3’s first 20%+ organic growth in over 15 years is the clearest signal yet that Oracle has genuinely crossed a structural inflection point, not simply ridden a temporary wave of AI enthusiasm.
The honest risk in this setup deserves direct treatment. Oracle entered Q4 carrying $43 billion in senior notes issued during the first nine months of FY2026, a $5 billion mandatory convertible preferred issue, a $20 billion at-the-market common stock program, interest expense equal to roughly 29% of annual net income, and $261 billion of additional long-term lease commitments tied to data center arrangements expected to commence through fiscal 2028. This is an aggressive capital structure for a company executing a real-time pivot into physical infrastructure. If OCI revenue growth moderates, or if the $90 billion FY2027 target requires guidance cuts, the debt burden becomes the story rather than the backlog. The Q4 print and FY2027 initial guidance are the market’s next comprehensive test of whether Oracle’s capital allocation is delivering returns commensurate with its risk. For traders watching Thursday’s session, the key signals are the magnitude of any cloud revenue beat against the 46%–50% guidance, the FY2027 revenue and capex guidance, and — most critically — any commentary from Larry Ellison or CEO Safra Catz on the pace at which that $553 billion backlog is converting into quarterly revenue.