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 ...
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 (ORCL) stock’s boom and bust in 2025 has become emblematic of the tech trade’s central conflict: Investors can’t decide whether AI is a generational opportunity or a looming risk. Oracle ...
This article first appeared on GuruFocus. CreditSights analysts have flagged a potentially material shift in Oracle (NYSE:ORCL)'s risk profile following the company's latest regulatory filing, which ...
Colin is an Associate Editor focused on tech and financial news. He has more than three years of experience editing, proofreading, and fact-checking content on current financial events and politics.
Oracle (ORCL) shares erased some losses on Friday after the company pushed back on a report that it was delaying some data centers tied to OpenAI (OPENAI). Oracle initially declined to comment on the ...
Oracle’s results are incredibly impressive. Oracle has a clear runway for future growth. Microsoft has a better risk/reward profile than Oracle. Investors are concerned that Oracle's spending is too ...
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 ...
The cloud computing giant missed revenue expectations, as well as announcing an increase in its planned spending on AI data centres. Global markets failed to retain the momentum sparked by an interest ...
Kara Greenberg is a senior news editor for Investopedia, where she does work writing, editing, and assigning daily markets and investing news. Prior to joining Investopedia, Kara was a researcher and ...
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 ...