TLDR
- Oracle stock is down roughly 29% year-to-date as of early April 2026, despite strong revenue growth.
- Q3 FY26 revenue came in at $17.2 billion, up 22% year-over-year, beating Wall Street estimates.
- Oracle’s remaining performance obligations (RPO) backlog surged to $553 billion, up from $455 billion in September 2025.
- The company plans to spend $50 billion on capital expenditure in FY2026 and raise another $50 billion through debt and equity.
- Analyst opinion is split, with price targets ranging from $160 to $400, reflecting deep disagreement over the timeline to free cash flow.
Oracle’s stock has been one of the more puzzling stories on Wall Street this year. The numbers look strong on the surface — revenue is growing fast, the backlog is enormous — but the stock has shed nearly a third of its value since January. Something doesn’t add up, and that’s exactly what has analysts arguing.
The company reported fiscal Q3 FY26 revenue of $17.2 billion, up 21.7% from a year earlier and ahead of analyst expectations of $16.91 billion. Earnings per share came in at $1.79, beating the consensus of $1.71. Oracle also lifted its fiscal 2027 revenue target to $90 billion.
The backlog tells an even bigger story. Remaining performance obligations climbed to $553 billion by March 2026, up sharply from $455 billion just six months earlier. That’s a lot of contracted future revenue.
So what’s the problem?
The Cost of Growing Fast
Oracle has said it expects fiscal 2026 capital expenditure of $50 billion — more than double the prior year. The company also said it plans to raise an additional $50 billion through debt and equity to fund cloud capacity expansion. By December 2025, Oracle already carried around $100 billion in debt.
That’s a heavy load. And investors are watching cash flows closely, knowing the returns from these investments won’t arrive overnight.
Melius analyst Ben Reitzes cut the stock to Hold in February with a $160 price target, arguing that Oracle should be valued more like an infrastructure company than a software firm — because without meaningful free cash flow until the 2030s, the usual software premium doesn’t hold.
Adding to the pressure, Oracle announced roughly 30,000 layoffs via mass email, a move that may trim near-term costs but raised questions about execution and morale.
Where Bulls and Bears Stand
Not everyone sees it that way. JPMorgan upgraded Oracle to Overweight in March with a $210 price target, calling the selloff “drastic” and arguing it improved the risk-reward more than the business had actually changed.
Mizuho analyst Siti Panigrahi kept a Buy rating but trimmed her price target from $400 to $320, pointing to Oracle’s cloud infrastructure as difficult for rivals to replicate. She also noted a shift in enterprise AI adoption — businesses want to bring AI to their existing data rather than move data to new platforms, a dynamic that plays to Oracle’s strengths.
KeyBanc’s Jackson Ader maintained an Overweight rating with a $300 target, calling Oracle a broad AI play across infrastructure, applications, and data layers. The company’s new Fusion Agentic Applications — targeting finance, HR, supply chain, and customer experience — are central to that story.
On the insider side, EVP Douglas Kehring sold 35,000 shares in January at around $194.89, reducing his ownership by roughly 51%. CEO Clayton Magouyrk sold 10,000 shares in February at $155.23. Corporate insiders collectively own 40.9% of the stock.
As of early April, ORCL opened at $138.00, well below its 52-week high of $345.72 and approaching its 52-week low of $121.24. The consensus analyst price target sits at $260.71, implying substantial upside — if the bulls are right about the timeline.
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