Larry Ellison’s Oracle is stumbling into the end of the year with its shares taking a beating. The tech firm’s stock has plummeted 30% so far this quarter, CNBC noted Friday. Only four trading days ...
Oracle's stock has tumbled 30% so far this quarter, headed for its steepest drop since the third quarter of 2001, when it slid almost 34%. Investors have grown skeptical about Oracle's ability to open ...
Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) stock fell as much as 16.5% on Dec. 11 in response to the company's second-quarter fiscal 2026 results. Now, at the time of this writing, Oracle is down roughly 42% from its ...
Colin is an Associate Editor focused on tech and financial news. He has more than three years of experience editing, proofreading, and fact-checking content on current financial events and politics.
While Oracle topped Wall Street's earnings expectations, it fell short of revenue targets, and its surging capital expenditures are making shareholders uneasy. Broadcom added to the market's anxiety ...
Oracle’s results are incredibly impressive. Oracle has a clear runway for future growth. Microsoft has a better risk/reward profile than Oracle. Investors are concerned that Oracle's spending is too ...
Oracle ORCL-1.94%decrease; red down pointing triangle shares fell sharply on Thursday, a stark display of investors’ concerns about tech companies overspending on artificial-intelligence ...
Oracle’s stock fell more than 12% on Thursday on growing fears about the software giant’s massive AI spending — shaving more than $30 billion off co-founder Larry Ellison’s fortune. The Texas-based ...
Oracle’s $2.26 EPS beat relied on a $2.7B one-time gain. Core earnings missed at $1.33 versus $1.64 expected. CapEx guidance jumped $15B to $50B for fiscal 2026. Free cash flow burned $10B for the ...
Kara Greenberg is a senior news editor for Investopedia, where she does work writing, editing, and assigning daily markets and investing news. Prior to joining Investopedia, Kara was a researcher and ...
Today, investors are waking up to red on their screens as many tech and AI stocks are dropping in premarket trading. But why are shares in these companies falling? Much of it has to do with the cloud ...