Oracle just delivered the ultimate earnings surprise - missing Wall Street's numbers but sending its stock soaring 21% in after-hours trading. The database giant's remaining performance obligations exploded 359% to $455 billion, signaling a massive AI-driven growth pipeline that has investors scrambling to buy despite the earnings miss.
Oracle just proved that in the AI gold rush, it's better to own the shovels than chase the nuggets. The enterprise software giant missed both earnings and revenue expectations for its fiscal first quarter, yet its stock erupted 21% in extended trading Tuesday - a move that could represent the company's best day since the dot-com boom of 1999.
The secret sauce? A staggering $455 billion in remaining performance obligations, up 359% from last year. That metric, which tracks contracted revenue not yet recognized, essentially gives Oracle a crystal ball into its future - and that future looks blindingly bright.
[embedded image: Oracle CEO Safra Catz at White House AI meeting]
"We signed four multibillion-dollar contracts with three different customers in the quarter," CEO Safra Catz revealed in the earnings statement, though she kept the customer names under wraps. The timing isn't coincidental - during the same quarter, OpenAI announced a partnership with Oracle to develop 4.5 gigawatts of U.S. data center capacity, a deal that could reshape the AI infrastructure landscape.
Oracle's cloud infrastructure business is firing on all cylinders, generating $3.3 billion in revenue with 55% year-over-year growth. That acceleration from 52% in the previous quarter shows the AI tailwinds are strengthening, not weakening. While Microsoft dominates the cloud conversation, Oracle's carved out a lucrative niche as the enterprise-grade backbone for AI workloads.
The company's access to Nvidia's coveted GPUs has become its crown jewel. As every tech giant scrambles for compute power, Oracle's infrastructure-as-a-service model positions it perfectly to monetize the AI revolution without the massive R&D investments required to build foundation models.
But Oracle isn't just playing defense. The company struck a deal to offer Google's Gemini AI models on its cloud platform, creating a fascinating dynamic where traditional rivals become strategic partners in the race to capture enterprise AI spending.
[video iframe: Oracle-OpenAI data center capacity analysis]
The earnings miss - $1.47 per share versus the expected $1.48 - feels almost quaint given the growth trajectory. Revenue of $14.93 billion came in slightly below the $15.04 billion consensus, but when you're sitting on nearly half a trillion dollars in contracted future business, quarterly fluctuations become background noise.