Oracle Corporation shares surged to record highs on Tuesday after the company delivered stronger-than-expected projections for its cloud infrastructure business, underscoring growing enterprise demand for artificial intelligence computing services. The stock recorded a historic single-day gain, adding nearly $270 billion to Oracle’s market capitalization, marking the largest one-day increase for any company with a valuation above $500 billion.

Oracle revised its fiscal year forecast for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), raising expected revenue growth to 77 percent, up from its previous 70 percent guidance. The company now anticipates annual OCI revenue to reach $18 billion. Over the next four years, Oracle projects cloud infrastructure revenues could scale to $144 billion. The updated outlook follows a sharp increase in customer demand for AI workloads and accelerated migration to Oracle’s data infrastructure.
Shares of Oracle climbed more than 38 percent following the announcement, pushing its market valuation from roughly $678 billion to over $946 billion. The spike in stock value also affected executive rankings, with Oracle co-founder and Chief Technology Officer Larry Ellison becoming the world’s richest person after his net worth rose to an estimated $393 billion. Financial disclosures showed a 359 percent year-over-year increase in Oracle’s Remaining Performance Obligations, a forward-looking metric representing contracted future revenue.
Multicloud partnerships expand Oracle’s global reach
RPOs now total $455 billion, reflecting significant backlog and customer commitments across cloud and AI infrastructure services. Oracle’s expansion plans include the deployment of 37 new data centers globally, in addition to the 34 already in operation. The data center footprint is being developed in partnership with major technology providers including Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud, allowing Oracle’s OCI platform to be embedded within these multi-cloud ecosystems. This infrastructure expansion is expected to support high-capacity AI workloads and large-scale enterprise migrations.
The company is also a key partner in the Stargate project, an artificial intelligence infrastructure initiative backed by OpenAI and SoftBank. Additional affiliations include reported collaborations with xAI and Meta Platforms, placing Oracle at the center of an emerging AI infrastructure supply chain. Despite the strong cloud growth, Oracle’s first-quarter financial results fell slightly below Wall Street expectations. The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.47, missing the consensus estimate of $1.50. Revenue for the quarter came in at $14.93 billion, just under the forecast of $15.05 billion.
Oracle solidifies leadership in enterprise AI hosting
However, executives emphasized that the scale of the company’s cloud backlog and upcoming infrastructure deployments outweighed short-term financial variances. Oracle’s rising momentum contributed to gains across the broader AI and semiconductor sectors. Nvidia shares rose 4.3 percent, while Advanced Micro Devices and Broadcom gained 2.9 percent and 6.9 percent, respectively. Companies directly linked to Oracle’s infrastructure operations also saw notable increases.
CoreWeave rose 18 percent, Arista Networks advanced 5.9 percent, and Palantir Technologies gained 3.2 percent in the session. Oracle’s capital expenditure is projected at $35 billion for the fiscal year, largely allocated to building out global data center capacity. While this level of spending has placed pressure on free cash flow in the short term, it aligns with the company’s cloud growth trajectory and rising infrastructure demand from enterprise clients pursuing AI transformation.
With contracted commitments at record levels and a sharp uptick in infrastructure demand, Oracle’s financial performance and forward guidance have positioned it as a central player in the global cloud and AI infrastructure market. The company’s stock performance, revenue backlog, and infrastructure partnerships underscore its evolving role in enterprise technology and high-performance computing at scale. – By Content Syndication Services.
