Austin-headquartered Oracle (ORCL) is in focus at writing, as the cloud and AI infrastructure firm warms up to report its fiscal Q4 earnings after market close on Jun. 10.
Consensus is for the Nasdaq-listed behemoth to post $1.96 a share of earnings for its fourth quarter, on a 20% year-on-year increase in revenue to $19.1 billion.
But the stakes extend well beyond Oracle only.
For semiconductor investors nursing a fresh wound from last week’s massive sell-off, Oracle Corp’s numbers carry outsized weight, particularly for the likes of Intel and Advanced Micro Devices.
What Oracle’s earnings mean for Intel stock
Oracle and Intel have built a deepening operational relationship, which makes the former’s report today a meaningful signal for INTC shareholders.
The company’s Cloud Infrastructure already runs OCI X12 Standard Acceleron Compute instances powered by Intel’s latest Xeon 6900 series processors – and these two US companies have jointly validated generative AI inference workloads on OCI using Intel Xeon CPUs.
Strong OCI momentum, therefore, translates directly into demand for the Xeon server CPUs that underpin those workloads.
Plus, any mention of extending Intel Xeon deployments or validating new AI inference partnerships on OCI could act as a direct sentiment catalyst for INTC ahead of its own Q2 report.
Heading into Oracle’s earnings print, Wall Street rates Intel stock at “hold”, albeit with price targets going as high as $200, indicating potential upside of more than 85% from current levels.
Note that options pricing signals a pop in INTC shares through the end of this week.
What Oracle’s earnings mean for AMD stock
For AMD, the Oracle print is arguably even more immediate.
Last October, the multinational inked a deal with Advanced Micro Devices to deploy 50,000 of its Instinct MI450 Series GPUs on OCI starting in Q3 of 2026 – a commitment that puts AMD at the center of Oracle’s AI infrastructure expansion.
With OpenAI, Meta, and xAI all signed to “multi-year” OCI agreements, the pace at which ORCL scales that GPU capacity is a direct revenue variable for AMD’s data center segment.
Oracle’s remaining performance obligations, which stood at $553 billion at the end of the third quarter, represent contracted future workloads that will eventually need silicon to run.
A strong Q4 with encouraging future guidance would validate the AI infrastructure spending cycle that AMD’s MI450 GPU franchise is built to capture.
Conversely, signs of capacity delivery delays or softening cloud commitments could add to the pressure AMD shares are already feeling.
Heading into Oracle’s quarterly release, Wall Street analysts rate Advanced Micro Devices Inc at “strong buy”, with the mean price target of $469 indicating potential upside of another 5% from here.
Note that the derivatives market signals an increase in AMD stock price through the end of this week.
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