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    Home » Oracle shares fall as revenue growth slows in latest fiscal quarter
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    Oracle shares fall as revenue growth slows in latest fiscal quarter

    December 11, 2025
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    AUSTIN, Texas, December 11, 2025: Oracle Corporation shares dropped sharply after the enterprise software company reported quarterly revenue that fell short of Wall Street expectations, signaling a slowdown in the company’s cloud growth momentum. The stock declined more than eight percent in after-hours trading following the announcement, reversing some of the gains made earlier this year. Oracle reported total revenue of $12.9 billion for the fiscal second quarter ended November 30, a five percent increase from the same period last year but below analyst forecasts of $13.1 billion.

    Stock market response follows Oracle’s weaker-than-expected revenue results. (Credit – Oracle)

    Net income rose to $2.4 billion, or $0.86 per share, compared with $1.7 billion, or $0.63 per share, a year earlier. Adjusted earnings came in at $1.34 per share, marginally exceeding consensus estimates of $1.33. The company’s largest division, cloud services and license support, generated $9.9 billion in revenue, up twelve percent year-over-year. However, revenue from cloud license and on-premise license sales declined seventeen percent to $1.2 billion, reflecting uneven performance across its core software businesses.

    The results highlighted the mixed impact of Oracle’s ongoing shift from traditional software licensing to cloud-based infrastructure and applications. Chief Executive Officer Safra Catz said Oracle’s cloud infrastructure business continued to expand despite capacity limitations that slowed deployment of new data centers. She stated that customer demand for Oracle’s cloud services remained strong, driven by increased enterprise adoption and ongoing projects in artificial intelligence computing.

    Oracle’s AI partnerships aim to enhance cloud capabilities

    The company has been investing in new data center regions globally to meet growing demand for high-performance cloud infrastructure. Oracle’s quarterly update included developments related to its partnerships in the artificial intelligence sector, including collaborations with NVIDIA and Cohere to enhance support for large-scale AI model training and deployment on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. These alliances are designed to strengthen Oracle’s position in the expanding AI cloud market, where it competes with Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud.

    Despite the steady growth in its cloud unit, Oracle’s revenue miss weighed heavily on investor sentiment. The results arrived amid broader uncertainty in the technology sector, where enterprise software and cloud providers have faced tighter corporate IT budgets and cautious spending patterns. Oracle’s shares had risen nearly forty percent in 2025 before the earnings release, buoyed by expectations of continued growth in cloud demand and AI-related investments.

    Oracle maintains profitability amid revenue slowdown

    For the current quarter, Oracle forecast revenue growth between six and eight percent, with adjusted earnings per share projected to range from $1.35 to $1.39, broadly consistent with analyst expectations. The company emphasized its commitment to expanding global infrastructure capacity and sustaining profitability as it scales its cloud operations. Oracle remains one of the largest providers of enterprise software and cloud computing solutions, serving sectors including finance, healthcare, and government. Its continued expansion in cloud infrastructure and software-as-a-service offerings marks a significant transformation from its legacy database business.

    While revenue growth moderated this quarter, Oracle’s earnings report underscored the strength of its subscription-based model and its ability to maintain solid margins amid a competitive landscape. The latest results provide a snapshot of how major technology firms are navigating a period of slower enterprise spending and intensifying competition in the cloud industry. Oracle’s performance reflects both the progress and challenges facing established software providers adapting to the fast-evolving demands of digital transformation and AI-driven workloads. – By Content Syndication Services.

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