Key Takeaways
- Analysts forecast Oracle Q3 EPS of $1.70, representing 15.6% year-over-year growth, with revenue projected at $16.92 billion — approximately 20% expansion.
- Oracle Cloud Infrastructure delivered 68% growth last quarter, fueled predominantly by a $300 billion partnership with OpenAI.
- Debt and lease liabilities expanded by $23 billion during the first half of fiscal 2026; share repurchase activity has virtually ceased.
- Remaining performance obligations jumped 438% to $523 billion in Q2, indicating robust future revenue visibility.
- Year-to-date, ORCL stock has declined 22% and sits 56% below its September high.
Oracle releases its Q3 earnings results today after market close, with investors focused on a critical question: does the cloud revenue explosion justify the accelerating debt accumulation?
Analyst consensus points to earnings per share of $1.70 alongside revenue near $16.92 billion. These figures would mark approximately 20% year-over-year revenue expansion — a dramatic acceleration for a company that averaged just 1% annual sales growth from 2012 through 2020.
The cloud transition has clearly gained momentum on the top line. Oracle Cloud Infrastructure posted 68% growth in the previous quarter, with OpenAI serving as a major catalyst. The companies share a multi-year agreement valued at approximately $300 billion, positioning it among Oracle’s most significant commercial relationships.
Cloud applications, representing the more established SaaS portion of operations, expanded 11% during the same timeframe. Combined, these two cloud divisions now account for approximately half of Oracle’s total revenue.
The RPO metric captured significant attention last quarter. Oracle disclosed a 438% spike in remaining performance obligations, reaching $523 billion in Q2 — a forward-looking indicator representing contracted revenue awaiting recognition. The backlog appears substantial.
The Debt Question
The investment required to construct this cloud infrastructure carries meaningful financial implications. During the initial six months of fiscal 2026, Oracle’s debt and lease obligations increased by $23 billion. Free cash flow has moved into negative territory at approximately -$10 billion, while capital expenditures reached roughly $12 billion.
Share repurchase programs have essentially halted, with dividend payments now largely supported through new borrowing. Oracle announced plans last month to raise $45 to $50 billion via combined equity and debt offerings throughout 2026.
ORCL shares have fallen 22% year-to-date, declining 56% from the September 2025 peak as market participants reassess the investment magnitude required to compete in AI infrastructure development.
What Analysts Are Saying
RBC Capital’s Rishi Jaluria maintained a Hold rating while reducing his price target to $160 from $195. He highlighted risks surrounding Oracle’s OpenAI dependence, observing that Anthropic continues gaining enterprise market share. He further mentioned that Blue Owl, Oracle’s primary Stargate financing partner, opted against funding a 1 GW Michigan facility due to leverage considerations.
Piper Sandler’s Billy Fitzsimmons takes a more constructive stance, holding a Buy rating with a $240 target. He contends the current valuation assigns minimal value to Oracle’s future AI revenue opportunities.
Wall Street’s overall sentiment reflects a Strong Buy consensus derived from 25 Buy ratings and 6 Hold ratings. The mean price target stands at $263.86 — implying approximately 74% upside potential from present levels.
Options market pricing suggests an anticipated 11.15% movement in either direction following the earnings release. This expectation actually falls below Oracle’s typical post-earnings volatility of 14.39% across the previous four quarters.

