Fresh concerns about data-center funding weighed down Oracle’s stock on Wednesday, but the selloff is looking overdone to some on Wall Street. Christine Ji is a reporter covering Big Tech.
Oracle’s earnings report last week didn’t do much to soothe concerns about how the company will fund its artificial-intelligence investments. In fact, investor sentiment has taken a turn for the worse ...
Oracle (ORCL) stock dropped over 40% from its September peak of $877B valuation. Oracle’s $300B OpenAI contract assumes spending Oracle cannot guarantee. Oracle’s remaining performance obligations hit ...
Larry Ellison’s Oracle is stumbling into the end of the year with its shares taking a beating. The tech firm’s stock has plummeted 30% so far this quarter, CNBC noted Friday. Only four trading days ...
Oracle's stock has tumbled 30% so far this quarter, headed for its steepest drop since the third quarter of 2001, when it slid almost 34%. Investors have grown skeptical about Oracle's ability to open ...
As an Oracle DBA, you will play a key role in supporting our extensive portfolio of over 800 Oracle databases, primarily focusing on Oracle 19c. You will be responsible for ensuring the reliability, ...
Oracle Corp. (ORCL) is rapidly transforming into a capital-intensive hyperscaler, facing margin compression and negative free cash flow despite robust cloud demand. Q2 FY2026 saw cloud infrastructure ...
While Oracle topped Wall Street's earnings expectations, it fell short of revenue targets, and its surging capital expenditures are making shareholders uneasy. Broadcom added to the market's anxiety ...
Oracle’s stock fell more than 12% on Thursday on growing fears about the software giant’s massive AI spending — shaving more than $30 billion off co-founder Larry Ellison’s fortune. The Texas-based ...
Aaron McDade is a breaking news reporter for Investopedia. He is an experienced journalist who has covered everything from the latest in business and tech news to sports and international news like ...
Did people complain – and by people, we mean Wall Street – as the world’s largest bookseller invested huge amounts of money to transform itself into an alternative to driving to Wal-Mart? Or, better ...