Oracle’s Q2 results left the market wanting more; the RPO suggests more than enough is coming to drive this market higher.
Analysts forecast nearly 50% upside from the critical support target and mid-December’s price action.
The embedding of AI throughout its entire stack will drive robust long-term growth.
Interested in Oracle Corporation? Here are five stocks we like better.
Oracle’s (NYSE: ORCL) stock price plunged following its fiscal year 2026 (FY2026) Q2 earnings release in mid-December because of its mixed results. However, weak as the revenue may be, the company is undergoing a strategic transformation supported by AI that will cement its position as a leader for decades to come. While the build-out of AI infrastructure drives results today, it is the long-term embedding and application of AI that will drive results in the long term. Oracle is positioned to embed AI throughout its stack, enabling à la carte AI services, including all major models, across sectors, industries, and verticals.
Highlights from its FY2026 Q2 results include a commitment to chip neutrality and the sale of its in-house chip design business, Ampere. This position provides for the exclusive use of third-party technologies, including NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA), Advanced Micro Devices (NASDAQ: AMD) and Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO), both of which are expected to see accelerating demand as 2026 progresses. Oracle’s products are also embedded throughout Microsoft’s (NASDAQ: MSFT), Amazon’s (NASDAQ: AMZN), and Alphabet’s (NASDAQ: GOOGL) cloud networks, providing numerous growth opportunities.
→ Market Momentum: 3 Stocks Poised for Major Breakouts
Calendar Q3 2025 results from NVIDIA and GPU-as-a-Service providers such as Applied Digital (NASDAQ: APLD) indicate capacity is sold out, a tailwind for business throughout the AI complex. Regarding AI services, results from software companies such as Salesforce (NYSE: CRM), Snowflake(NYSE: SNOW), and Guidewire Software (NYSE: GWRE) indicate accelerating global adoption of cloud and AI services, a segment expected to be larger and grow faster than infrastructure.
→ Apple Stock Could Surge on Record iPhone Sales and Bold AI Strategy
Oracle produced a mixed FY 2026 Q2 report, but let’s be fair. The bar was set high, and the revenue miss is negligible given the remaining performance obligation (RPO) increase and the strength of margins. The company reported $16.06 billion in net revenue, up nearly 14% compared to the prior year. Revenue is 80 basis points below consensus, but underpinned by robust gains in the cloud and AI segments. Total cloud grew by 34% with IaaS up by 68% and SaaS up by 11%. Multicloud, Oracle’s true strength, led the way with an 817% gain. Multicloud is critical as all businesses must rely on numerous software vendors, which means they all use multiple clouds, including Oracle’s.

