The Number That Puts Oracle Stock To The Test

+48.95%
Upside
184
Market
273
Trefis
ORCL: Oracle logo
ORCL
Oracle

For an investor in Oracle (ORCL), the headlines are dizzying. The company is signing AI infrastructure contracts by the tens of billions and has built a backlog of future business that seems to defy gravity. Yet the stock has been under pressure, down 12.2% over the past year, suggesting the market sees more to the story.

That story comes down to one number. It’s not revenue or margins, but the powerful lever that drives them both: the net cash outlay for capital expenditures. This is the cash Oracle is spending to build the data centers required to fulfill its AI promise. And for the coming fiscal year, that number is large.

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How Big Is A $70 Billion Bet?

Oracle has guided to an expected net cash outlay for capital expenditures of around $70 billion for fiscal 2027. To put that figure in perspective, it’s a significant jump from the $48 billion spent in the just-completed fiscal year. This isn’t an investment funded by leftover profits; it’s a project of such scale that the company expects to raise around $40 billion in new debt and equity to support it. This is the cost of admission to the hyperscale AI infrastructure game, and it represents a fundamental shift in the company’s financial model.

The Price Of Building The Future

A spending plan of this magnitude has immediate and unavoidable consequences. Management has been direct about the first one: profitability will take a hit. The company stated its fiscal year 2027 gross margin will step down, as it ramps up its data center projects. The second consequence is cash flow. According to one report, management expects the aggressive spending to result in negative FCF through FY2028. In essence, Oracle is trading years of profitability and cash generation for a large expansion it believes will secure its future. The risk for investors is that the payoff for this sacrifice gets delayed or proves smaller than anticipated.

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What’s Riding On This Number?

Everything. The company’s guidance for total revenue growth of +34% in fiscal 2027 is entirely dependent on successfully deploying this capital. That record $638 billion in remaining performance obligations, or RPO, is an incredible asset, but it remains a promise until the infrastructure to service it is built, powered on, and running customer workloads. The core risk is execution. As one analyst noted, the real concern is whether Oracle can turn that spend into revenue on time. Any significant delays in this build-out could disrupt the timeline for converting that large backlog into the revenue and profits shareholders are counting on.

For anyone holding the stock, the key extends beyond the headline RPO figure to watching how efficiently this $70 billion outlay translates that backlog into recognized revenue. That will be the clearest sign of whether this colossal bet is starting to pay off.

Don’t Bet It All On One Number

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