Dive Brief:
- Oracle will pour roughly $50 billion into capital investments to increase cloud and AI compute capacity during its current fiscal year, executives said during a Q2 2026 earnings call on Wednesday. In September, Oracle said it anticipated $35 billion in FY2026 capital expenditures.
- The company defended the $15 billion increase with assurances that the investments were tied to committed customer spend. “The vast majority of our capex investments are for revenue-generating equipment that is going into our data centers,” Principal Financial Officer Doug Kehring said. “We are confident that our customer backlog is at a healthy level and that we have the operational and financial strength to execute successfully.”
- Oracle reported a more than fivefold year-over-year spike in remaining performance obligations, with unfulfilled contract value increasing $68 billion sequentially to $523 billion for the quarter. Oracle revenue grew 13% year over year to $16.1 billion, driven by a 33% jump in cloud revenue to $8 billion.
Dive Insight:
Oracle’s infrastructure buildouts corresponded with a flurry of deals for chips and compute resources, as demand for its cloud services mounted.
The cloud and software provider’s market share inched upward for seven consecutive quarters, growing one percentage point to 3.1%, John Dinsdale, chief analyst and research director at Synergy Research Group, told Channel Dive. Global spending on cloud services reached $107 billion during the three months ending Sept. 30, according to the firm’s research.
The achievement is larger than the percentage point suggests.
“This is the law of large numbers writ large,” Dinsdale said in an email. “When you are a relatively small part of a large and rapidly growing market, it is incredibly hard to meaningfully move the market share needle.”
While a hefty chunk of Oracle’s added billions in cloud revenue and backlog are bound up in massive compute deals with OpenAI and other large language model builders, the company is banking on sustained demand from its base of enterprise customers and the partners who service Oracle Cloud Infrastructure accounts.
“We cannot deliver everything ourselves,” said Clay Magouyrk, who was elevated with Mike Sicilia to co-CEO in September. “We rely on our rapidly expanding partner community to provide the best experience on OCI.”
The company opened partner reseller networks for its AWS, Microsoft and Google Cloud multicloud database alliances and saw consumption increase more than ninefold year over year. Consumption was up a modest 89% in Oracle Cloud Marketplace, as enterprise IT provisioning continues to shift to hyperscaler platforms.
“Partnerships make our ecosystem richer, which helps our customers, and that growth translates directly into more OCI growth as our partners build their solutions on our infrastructure,” Magouyrk said.
Oracle’s mini-cloud offerings also gained traction.
The company launched its Dedicated Region end-user private cloud in October to complement the Oracle Alloy partner cloud offering. Both provide full OCI capabilities with a footprint of as few as three racks.
Anyone with a credit card can sign up for hundreds of OCI regions or spin up their own cloud in just a few minutes, said Magouyrk. “OCI is the only full cloud available to individual customers … OCI is also the only cloud that enables partners to become cloud providers,” he said.