Oracle · 2026-06-10
Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) Latest Earnings Release Summary
Oracle’s latest report is a clean case of accelerating AI cloud infrastructure revenue paired with rising capital intensity. Operating momentum was strong: Q4 revenue was $19.2B, up 21% YoY; total cloud revenue was $9.9B, up 47%; OCI / IaaS revenue was $5.8B, up 93%. FY2026 revenue reached $67.4B, up 17%, with cloud revenue of $34.0B, up 39%.
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Oracle’s latest report is a clean case of accelerating AI cloud infrastructure revenue paired with rising capital intensity. Operating momentum was strong: Q4 revenue was $19.2B, up 21% YoY; total cloud revenue was $9.9B, up 47%; OCI / IaaS revenue was $5.8B, up 93%. FY2026 revenue reached $67.4B, up 17%, with cloud revenue of $34.0B, up 39%.
- Oracle’s latest report is a clean case of accelerating AI cloud infrastructure revenue paired with rising capital intensity. Operating momentum was strong: Q4 revenue was $19.2B, up 21% YoY; total cloud revenue was $9.9B, up 47%; OCI / IaaS revenue was $5.8B, up 93%. FY2026 revenue reached $67.4B, up 17%, with cloud revenue of $34.0B, up 39%.
- The margin read is mixed in a useful way. Operating income is scaling, but free cash flow was negative for fiscal 2026 because Oracle is spending aggressively to build AI cloud capacity.
- The main risk is capital intensity. If AI datacenter buildout requires more financing than investors expect, RPO growth may be discounted even when demand is strong.
Takeaway
Oracle’s latest report is a clean case of accelerating AI cloud infrastructure revenue paired with rising capital intensity. Operating momentum was strong: Q4 revenue was $19.2B, up 21% YoY; total cloud revenue was $9.9B, up 47%; OCI / IaaS revenue was $5.8B, up 93%. FY2026 revenue reached $67.4B, up 17%, with cloud revenue of $34.0B, up 39%. The key question is no longer whether Oracle’s cloud business is growing. It is whether Oracle can convert its massive RPO and customer prepayment structure into profitable AI infrastructure revenue while managing the cash burden of data center expansion. FY2026 free cash flow was negative $23.7B, the most important pressure point in the report.
Revenue Quality
OCI is now the main growth engine. Q4 IaaS revenue nearly doubled YoY, far outpacing SaaS growth of 10%. Oracle is increasingly being valued not only as a database and applications vendor, but as an AI cloud infrastructure provider. SaaS remains stable, but it is no longer the marginal story. Q4 Cloud Apps revenue was $4.1B, up 10%; full-year Cloud Apps revenue was $15.9B, up 11%. The applications business is still compounding, but the valuation sensitivity is now much more tied to IaaS. Legacy software migration remains a structural drag. Q4 Software revenue was $6.8B, down 2%, as customers continue migrating from on-premise software to cloud. OCI growth must therefore both create incremental revenue and offset gradual pressure in legacy software.
Profit And Cash Flow
Q4 GAAP operating income was $6.1B, up 20%. Non-GAAP operating income was $8.6B, up 22%, implying a non-GAAP operating margin of roughly 45%. Oracle still has strong operating leverage. The issue appears below operating cash flow. FY2026 operating cash flow reached a record $32.0B, but free cash flow was negative $23.7B. Oracle’s earnings story has become a balance sheet and financing story: the company is generating cash, but AI infrastructure buildout is consuming it faster.
RPO And Financing Pressure
RPO increased from $553B in Q3 to $638B in Q4, up $85B sequentially and 363% YoY. This is the strongest demand signal in the report. However, Oracle also disclosed that customer-prepaid or customer-supplied GPU portions of large AI contracts now total $75B. That reduces Oracle’s direct GPU financing burden, but it also shows how capital intensive and structurally complex these AI contracts have become. In FY2026, Oracle raised $43B of debt financing and $5B of equity financing. In FY2027, it expects to raise another approximately $40B through debt and equity, including the previously announced $20B at-the-market equity issuance. Financing needs and dilution are now central to the stock.
Guidance
Q1 FY2027: - Total revenue expected to grow 27%-29% YoY. - Total cloud revenue expected to grow 58%-64% YoY. - Non-GAAP EPS expected at $1.72-$1.76, up 17%-20% YoY. FY2027: - Oracle confirmed its $90B total revenue target. - Non-GAAP EPS guidance was raised to $8.05. The guidance is strong, but it assumes continued OCI delivery, manageable capital spending, and no major deterioration in financing costs.
What To Watch
1. FY2027 capex and financing cadence: if capital spending keeps surprising higher, free cash flow pressure may outweigh revenue acceleration. 2. RPO conversion: $638B of RPO is powerful, but timing, margin, and payment structure matter. 3. OCI margin profile: the faster IaaS grows, the more investors will question whether it dilutes software margins. 4. Equity financing dilution: the $20B ATM program affects per-share value. 5. SaaS and database cloud momentum: stronger Cloud Apps and Multicloud AI Database growth would make the revenue mix healthier.
Sources
- [Oracle FY2026 Q4 / FY2026 results](https://investor.oracle.com/investor-news/news-details/2026/Oracle-Announces-Record-Q4-and-FY-2026-Results-Driven-by-Cloud-Infrastructure--Cloud-Applications/default.aspx) - [Oracle FY2026 Form 10-K](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1341439/000119312526277521/orcl-20260531.htm)
FAQ
Reader questions
What is the key read from ORCL's latest earnings?
Oracle’s latest report is a clean case of accelerating AI cloud infrastructure revenue paired with rising capital intensity. Operating momentum was strong: Q4 revenue was $19.2B, up 21% YoY; total cloud revenue was $9.9B, up 47%; OCI / IaaS revenue was $5.8B, up 93%. FY2026 revenue reached $67.4B, up 17%, with cloud revenue of $34.0B, up 39%.
What should investors watch next for Oracle?
Watch OCI revenue, cloud revenue, RPO conversion, free cash flow, capital funding, FY2027 revenue guide, plus whether the next report confirms this quarter's earnings signal.
Is this investment advice?
No. This is an educational earnings analysis framework, not a recommendation to buy or sell.
Sources