Oracle just had a strong quarter. It beat on sales and profit, and it lifted its forecast for the year. That mix usually sends a stock up. Oracle's fell 11% instead.
Why The Stock Dropped
The reason came down to cash. Oracle said it will raise about $40 billion in debt and new stock this fiscal year.
The money is for its AI buildout. In plain terms, that is the data centers and chips it needs to run AI for big customers.
Raising that cash is not free. Selling new stock can lower the value of shares people already own.
New debt also adds interest to pay back. That is a lot to take on at once, even for a company Oracle's size.
About $20 billion of the plan comes from selling new stock, with the rest from new debt. Oracle says it needs both to fund the build fast enough.
So investors looked past the good quarter. They fixed on the cost instead.
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Why Chip Suppliers Jumped
Here is the twist. The same spending that scared Oracle's investors lifted the firms that sell it gear.
Chip gear makers all rose, with Applied Materials up 7%, Lam Research up 8%, KLA up almost 9%, and ASML up more than 5%.
Think of it like a gold rush, where Oracle is the one digging. The digging is risky and costly.
But the firms selling the shovels get paid either way. Oracle's plan basically promised them years of orders.
What Oracle Is Buying
Oracle is not spending for fun. It has signed some of the biggest cloud deals in its history.
The work means running AI for a who's who of tech. The list includes the maker of ChatGPT, the chip leader Nvidia, and Meta.
These deals come with a catch. They only pay off if Oracle can build enough to handle them.
That build is what the new cash pays for. Oracle now has a backlog of future orders worth a record $638 billion.
An Industry-Wide Race
Oracle is not the only one spending big on AI. Across tech, the largest firms are pouring cash into data centers to keep up.
The biggest names have promised to spend hundreds of billions on AI this year alone. Oracle's move shows how fast those bills are climbing.
The race is costly, and investors are starting to ask when it pays off. Oracle just gave them a fresh reason to wonder.
What To Watch
The market's main worry is timing. Oracle has to spend the money now, but the sales show up much later.
So the test is simple. Can Oracle turn this AI bet into steady sales fast enough to cover the cost?
Investors will watch the next few quarters for proof. For now, Wall Street is paying the shovel sellers, not the digger.
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