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Oracle stock may be one AI slowdown away from disaster

by June 11, 2026
written by June 11, 2026

Oracle just delivered another quarter of strong cloud growth and promptly reminded investors why its stock is increasingly hard to live with.

Behind the company’s record revenue sits a financing machine running at “full throttle” – burning through free cash flow and relying heavily on debt at a pace that would make even the most bullish AI optimist pause.

Its latest $20 billion net-new capital raise announced alongside Q4 earnings is not a one-off event; it’s a pattern – and a worrying one.

Oracle earnings look great, until you look harder

On the surface, Oracle’s fiscal Q4 earnings were genuinely impressive.

The company’s overall revenue hit $19.2 billion, up 21% year-on-year, while cloud revenue soared 47% versus 2025 to a whopping $9.9 billion.

The Cloud Infrastructure (IaaS) unit was the standout, growing 93% in the quarter to $5.8 billion, putting Oracle firmly in the conversation alongside hyperscalers like AWS and Azure.

In its earnings release, ORCL said cloud made up roughly half of its overall business in fiscal 2026.

The behemoth ended Q4 with a jaw-dropping $638 billion in remaining performance obligations (RPOs), up a remarkable $85 billion from the prior quarter.

So on paper, Oracle looks like a company eating the AI infrastructure boom for breakfast – but the problem is who’s picking up the check.

Oracle’s AI bill is getting scary

Here’s the math that matters: Oracle announced plans to raise about $40 billion in fiscal year 2027 through a combination of debt and equity.

Since roughly half of that, a $20 billion at-the-market equity issuance, was previously disclosed, the new capital being committed is $20 billion on top of what investors already knew was coming.

Note that this is not a company tapping capital markets once to fund a strategic pivot. Oracle raised $43 billion in debt and another $5 billion in equity in its FY2026 alone.

ORCL spent nearly $56 billion on capital expenditures that same year, and is now forecasting $70 billion in net capex outlays for FY2027.

Despite recording billions in operating profit, Oracle remains effectively cash-flow negative after capex, meaning it must continuously turn to external markets just to keep its infrastructure buildout alive.

And every time it does, shareholders pay a price – either through dilution or through the mounting cost of servicing an ever-growing debt pile.

A leveraged bet on relentless AI demand

The most alarming number in Oracle’s balance sheet isn’t the share count – it’s the debt.

As of Q3, Oracle carried $162 billion in total debt, a figure that’s driven its Altman Z-Score – a widely used measure of bankruptcy risk – firmly into the grey zone.

For context, ORCL’s long-term debt was about $60 billion just six years ago.

The recent explosion is almost entirely related to AI infrastructure spending, anchored in part by a reported $300 billion, five-year contract with OpenAI.

That sounds transformational, and it may well be – but it also means Oracle’s financial health is dangerously tethered to a single client’s ability to pay, and to an AI demand environment that must not just hold steady, but accelerate.

With a debt-to-equity ratio that analysts have pegged at over 400%, dwarfing Microsoft’s roughly 23% and Google’s approximately 7%, Oracle really has no financial cushion if AI sentiment shifts, interest rates spike, or hyperscaler competition intensifies.

The $638 billion RPO backlog is only valuable if it converts into cash, but if AI investment cycles cool, contract timelines stretch, or customers renegotiate, that number isn’t a safety net; it’s actually a liability dressed up as an asset.

The post Oracle stock may be one AI slowdown away from disaster appeared first on Invezz

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