On June 15, Oracle rose 3.03% in pre-market trading to $190.38/share, with turnover of $16.82 million, marking a partial recovery following the stock's nearly 13% plunge last week after its Q4 fiscal 2026 earnings report.
The prior selloff was triggered by Oracle's disclosure of aggressive capital expenditure plans — $700 billion in net CapEx for FY2027, a $40 billion debt-and-equity financing plan, and negative free cash flow of $23.7 billion for FY2026. Despite strong results including 21% revenue growth to $19.2 billion, 93% OCI revenue growth, and record RPO of $638 billion, investors punished the stock over dilution and cash flow concerns.
Supporting the rebound, multiple analysts maintained positive ratings post-earnings. Bernstein raised its target to $325, Wedbush maintained outperform at $240, and Oracle's bond prices rose as investors welcomed the transparency of its financing roadmap. The broader Systems Software sector also traded higher, with NEBIUS up 9.74%, ServiceNow up 4.69%, and Microsoft up 1.97%.
(The above content is based on publicly available market information, generated by a program or algorithm, and is intended solely as a stock movement alert. It does not constitute investment advice or a basis for trading decisions.)
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