Key Takeaways
- Oracle experienced a premarket decline reaching 7.6% on Tuesday following a Wall Street Journal exposé showing OpenAI failed to achieve projected user and revenue milestones.
- The company maintains a five-year, $300 billion cloud infrastructure agreement with OpenAI, representing most of its cloud commitments.
- Market contagion affected related stocks, with SoftBank declining 9.9% and CoreWeave losing 7.6% during premarket hours.
- Industry observers have flagged concerns about Oracle’s actual debt exposure, suggesting off-balance-sheet financing arrangements may obscure the full picture.
- Analyst sentiment remains predominantly positive, with 34 of 44 experts maintaining Buy ratings, including Wedbush’s Dan Ives who holds a $225 target.
Oracle (ORCL) shares tumbled by up to 7.6% during premarket activity on Tuesday following a Wall Street Journal exposé that questioned OpenAI’s capacity to fulfill its financial obligations.
According to reports, OpenAI failed to achieve internal benchmarks for user acquisition and revenue generation during recent months. The artificial intelligence company had established a goal of reaching 1 billion weekly active users by year-end 2025 but came up short.
The organization also failed to meet several monthly revenue projections earlier this year, facing intensified competition in the coding and enterprise AI sectors.
ChatGPT’s dominance in generative AI web traffic decreased from 86.7% one year prior to 64.5% in January 2026. Meanwhile, Gemini’s market share expanded from 5.7% to 21.5% during the identical timeframe.
Sarah Friar, OpenAI’s Chief Financial Officer, has reportedly expressed internal apprehension regarding the company’s ability to honor future computing contract commitments should revenue acceleration fail to materialize.
This situation directly impacts Oracle. The enterprise technology provider maintains a $300 billion, five-year contract to deliver computing infrastructure to OpenAI—a commitment that constitutes the lion’s share of Oracle’s substantial cloud backlog.
Oracle’s remaining performance obligations have skyrocketed 325% to reach $553 billion. The corporation is simultaneously securing $50 billion through various debt and equity instruments to finance expanded data center infrastructure.
The complication? The majority of revenue stemming from the OpenAI partnership remains scheduled for next year’s arrival. Oracle continues investing capital upfront while anticipating future returns.
Questions Surrounding Oracle’s Financial Leverage
George Noble, a hedge fund industry veteran with previous tenure at Fidelity, delivered sharper criticism than most market observers. He cautioned that Oracle employs project financing mechanisms to exclude substantial borrowing amounts from its official balance sheet.
“So when analysts quote Oracle’s debt load, they’re UNDERSTATING the actual exposure by a meaningful margin,” Noble wrote on X.
He additionally proposed that recent financial results might be artificially enhanced through accounting modifications and expense reductions, cautioning the broader investment thesis could “end HORRIBLY.”
Oracle’s equity valuation has already retreated significantly—trading approximately 50% below its 52-week peak achieved last September.
The market downturn extended to associated companies. SoftBank, which maintains a 13% ownership stake in OpenAI, declined 9.9% in Tokyo trading. CoreWeave, which operates cloud infrastructure agreements with OpenAI valued at up to $22.4 billion, retreated 7.6% in premarket trading.
Wall Street Maintains Optimistic Outlook
Despite recent volatility, the investment community has largely maintained confidence in Oracle. Among 44 analysts monitored by Koyfin, 34 maintain Buy ratings or higher, with consensus price targets suggesting approximately 40% appreciation potential.
Dan Ives from Wedbush reaffirmed his Outperform recommendation and $225 valuation target on April 24. He contends the market misinterprets Oracle’s aggressive capital expenditure as vulnerability rather than recognizing it as strategic infrastructure positioning.
Ives emphasized that Oracle has already reinforced its financial foundation by securing $30 billion through investment-grade debt instruments and preferred equity offerings.
OpenAI, for its part, told the Journal it was “buying as much compute as we can.” The company did not immediately respond to Barron’s request for comment Tuesday morning.

