What makes Oracle a hyperscaler?
Oracle's significant cloud infrastructure investments and a major deal projecting $30 billion in cloud revenue by FY28 have solidified its position.
Tech / Computing
Oracle (ORCL) has been officially recognized as the fourth global hyperscaler by Evercore ISI analysts. This recognition is largely due to a recent deal that projects $30 billion in cloud computing revenue by fiscal year 2028, positioning O...
Oracle's recognition as a hyperscaler reflects its strategic focus and investments in cloud infrastructure. Evercore analysts break down OCI into three segments: core OCI, AI OCI, and DBaaS, projecting strong CAGR through FY29. Core OCI is expected to grow at a 49% CAGR, DBaaS at 37%, and AI services at a remarkable 104%. The analysts also provide a model that allows clients to adjust growth and margin estimates to see how they impact the income statement.
The company's FY26 outlook came in more upbeat than expected, further solidifying its position. The growing importance of OCI is central to Oracle's revenue reacceleration. However, a skew towards AI could put downward pressure on gross and operating margins but would also lead to higher revenue and EPS.
Oracle's significant cloud infrastructure investments and a major deal projecting $30 billion in cloud revenue by FY28 have solidified its position.
Oracle shows notable strengths in sovereign and AI workloads within the hyperscaler market.
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