3rdPartyFeeds

Oracle Gains After Profit Tops Estimates on Cloud Expansion

(Bloomberg) -- Oracle Corp. jumped in extended trading after reporting quarterly profit and bookings that topped estimates, signaling that artificial intelligence demand continues to boost its cloud computing business. Most Read from BloombergHow Americans Voted Their Way Into a Housing CrisisWorld's Second Tallest Tower Spurs Debate About Who Needs ItUC Berkeley Gives Transfer Students a Purpose-Built Home on CampusChicago Halts Hiring as Deficit Tops $1 Billion Through 2025The Plan for the Wor Read More...

(Bloomberg) — Oracle Corp. jumped in extended trading after reporting quarterly profit and bookings that topped estimates, signaling that artificial intelligence demand continues to boost its cloud computing business.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Earnings, excluding some items, were $1.39 a share, Oracle said Monday in a statement. Revenue increased 7% to $13.3 billion in the period ended Aug. 31. Analysts, on average, estimated profit of $1.33 a share on sales of $13.3 billion.

“As cloud services became Oracle’s largest business, both our operating income and earnings per share growth accelerated,” Chief Executive Officer Safra Catz said in the statement.

The Austin-based company, known for its database software, is focused on expanding the cloud infrastructure business of renting computer power and storage to compete with Amazon.com Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google. Oracle’s cloud has developed a reputation for success with generative artificial intelligence workloads — the company touted customers including including Reka and Elon Musk’s xAI.

Oracle also announced a new agreement Monday to make its namesake database available on the Amazon Web Services cloud. Similar deals had been inked previously with Microsoft and Google, and are seen by analysts as a way to modernize Oracle’s database business.

The deal with AWS is “a good thing for Oracle’s database business, which is still largely on-premise at this point,” Anurag Rana, an analyst at Bloomberg Intelligence, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television.

Fiscal first-quarter cloud revenue increased 21% to $5.6 billion, meeting estimates. Of that, $2.2 billion came from renting computing and storage. Remaining performance obligation — a measure of booked sales — was $99 billion.

On a conference call after the results were released, Catz said the higher performance obligation was due to several large deals booked in the quarter. Investors are likely taking the results as a sign of more-sustained growth for Oracle, said Alex Zukin, an analyst at Wolfe Research, in an interview on CNBC.

The shares gained about 9% in late trading after closing at $139.89 in New York. Oracle has been one the best-performing large software stocks this year, rising 33% through the close.

Catz said revenue will jump double digits in the fiscal year ending in May. Analysts, on average, estimated a 9.4% increase. Cloud infrastructure revenue will grow quicker than in the prior fiscal year, she added.

Demand for cloud infrastructure continued to outpace supply in the quarter, Catz said on the call. Management has said it’s rapidly constructing new data centers to keep up with the need for servers to power AI.

Capital expenditures, which are watched as a metric of that investment, were $2.3 billion in the quarter. Analysts estimated $3.04 billion. In the fiscal year ending in May 2025, capital expenditures will be about double what they were in 2024, Catz said.

“Oracle has 162 cloud data centers in operation and under construction around the world,” Chairman Larry Ellison said in the statement.

(Updates with comments from conference call beginning in the eighth paragraph.)

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

Read More

Add Comment

Click here to post a comment