Oracle has found itself caught between a blistering cloud-growth story and a deepening financial reality check. The software giant’s shares have tumbled 22.6 percent over the past 30 days — closing Friday at €123.28 — even as its cloud infrastructure business surges. Now two new pressures are converging: a credit rating downgrade and a formal regulatory oversight role in the UK.
The British Treasury has designated Oracle a “Critical Third Party” to the country’s financial system, effective July 13, 2026. Under that label, the company will fall under the direct supervision of the Bank of England, the Prudential Regulation Authority and the Financial Conduct Authority. It joins three other large cloud providers that must now conduct regular resilience tests and report operational incidents. For a company already wrestling with ballooning capital expenditure, the permanent compliance burden adds yet another cost layer.
The designation came just one day after S&P Global cut Oracle’s long-term credit rating from “BBB” to “BBB-” — the lowest rung of investment grade. The agency also lowered Oracle’s short-term rating from “A-2” to “A-3”. S&P now projects fiscal 2027 capital expenditure of $90 billion to $95 billion, up sharply from an earlier estimate of $60 billion. The free cash flow deficit is expected to widen to $42 billion, nearly double previous forecasts. Oracle’s adjusted leverage ratio, meanwhile, is set to climb into the mid-4x range, a level S&P considers unsafe for a “BBB”-grade profile.
The stock’s reaction to the downgrade was muted, with shares eking out a 2.7 percent gain in U.S. trading on the day of the announcement. Investors appeared to focus instead on the $638 billion backlog of remaining performance obligations in Oracle’s cloud business. Those contracted but unbilled orders represent a revenue pipeline that the company believes justifies its aggressive investment strategy.
That strategy is straining the balance sheet. Oracle plans to raise between $45 billion and $50 billion in fiscal 2026 through a mix of debt and equity, primarily to fund expansions of its Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) business. In February, the company issued $5 billion in mandatory convertible preferred shares, and it has flagged a further $20 billion capital raise later this year, with the potential for additional double-digit billions through similar instruments.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Oracle?
The operational numbers, taken alone, are compelling. OCI revenue surged 93 percent in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2026, and total cloud revenue climbed 47 percent. Management has set an OCI revenue target of €166 billion for fiscal 2030. But the cash cost of getting there has turned free cash flow negative and pushed the stock into a technical overhang. The 14-day relative strength index stands at 31.1, indicating oversold conditions, while annualized 30-day volatility runs at 47.95 percent.
Analysts are split. Bernstein’s Mark L. Moerdler maintains a buy rating and a $325 price target, implying 132 percent upside. He argues that Oracle is leasing all its data center capacity and that the capacity for existing contracts is already embedded in leases that third parties are building. The average analyst target, however, sits at €220.57, representing a still-formidable 78.9 percent potential gain from current levels.
A notable concentration risk underlies the backlog. OpenAI is estimated to account for roughly half of Oracle’s outstanding contractual commitments, making the company disproportionately vulnerable to any setback in the AI industry’s path to profitability.
At €123.20 in Monday’s trading, the stock sits 8.2 percent above its 52-week low of €113.86 from February but still 56.1 percent below the September 2025 record of €280.70. The dividend — $0.50 per share paid on July 10 — offers a modest signal of stability. But with a shrinking credit buffer and a relatively unique regulatory designation for a company already just one notch above junk, Oracle’s growth story is now being tested by the very investments meant to sustain it.
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