Technology

Oracle’s AI-Driven Growth Has Wall Street Most Bullish in Years

Siti Panigrahi, managing director and equity research at Mizuho Americas, joins BNN Bloomberg and talks about his thoughts about ORacle's Q1 tops it expectations.

(Bloomberg) -- Oracle Corp. is winning over investors and analysts as it sees a resurgence in sales growth driven by artificial intelligence-fueled demand.

Shares in the software giant are up almost 60% this year, with a chunk of those gains coming after last month’s estimate-beating earnings and forecast for sales to roughly double over the next five years. Two recent analyst upgrades have left Wall Street at its most bullish in more than six years, with 24 firms rating Oracle shares a buy, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Shares in the company were edging lower, falling 1% on Wednesday.

The newfound popularity has come as Oracle cements its status as an AI winner. It’s been focused on expanding its cloud infrastructure business — which competes with Amazon.com Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google — and has developed a reputation for success with generative AI workloads, helping to boost its overall revenue growth.

“Growth is inflecting higher, at a pace much faster than we’ve been used to at Oracle, and that’s a huge positive,” said Dan Eye, chief investment officer at Fort Pitt Capital Group. “At the same time, it’s been something of an under-the-radar name, and while the valuation has recently risen, it is still cheaper than other tech names.”

Even after a great year, there’s still some way to go to shake off Oracle’s underdog status compared with larger cloud players like Microsoft and smaller rivals like Salesforce Inc. Over the past five fiscal years, Oracle’s revenue growth has averaged about 6%, compared with 14% for Microsoft and more than 20% for Salesforce.

However, Oracle is expected to see revenue growth of about 10% in the current fiscal year and a further acceleration in 2026 and 2027, according to the average of analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That’s mainly due to growth in its cloud infrastructure business, where sales are forecast to jump 55% this year.

Oracle’s stock rally this year — adding more than $170 billion in market value — has boosted its valuation to 26 times forward earnings, up from about 18 times at the beginning of the year. That’s still cheaper than some larger peers like Microsoft and Amazon, and it isn’t deterring analysts and investors.

“We find it hard not to put a 25x multiple on a company set to grow faster than Salesforce and Adobe,” Melius Research analyst Ben Reitzes wrote in a report on Monday, upgrading his rating on Oracle to buy from hold. “Investors will continue to reward Oracle for faster revenue growth.”

Reitzes’ report followed an upgrade by JMP Securities analyst Patrick Walravens, who raised his rating to market outperform from market perform on Sept. 10, citing accelerating revenue growth and expectations for further market share gains in cloud infrastructure services.

Still, even as Wall Street analysts have turned more bullish on the stock in recent months, they prefer other Big Tech names. About 63% of analysts covering Oracle have a buy rating, compared to Alphabet’s 83%, Microsoft 96% and Amazon’s 95%, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Top Tech Stories

  • Google won a court fight with the European Union over a €1.5 billion ($1.7 billion) fine for thwarting competition for online ads, partly atoning for last week’s crushing defeat in a separate judgment for abusing its monopoly powers.
  • The Taiwanese company Gold Apollo Co., whose brand appears on pagers that exploded in Lebanon, said a company based in Hungary is responsible for manufacturing the models used in the attacks, adding to the mystery around a strike that is escalating tensions in the Middle East.
  • California Governor Gavin Newsom said he is concerned about a potential “chilling effect” on the development of AI posed by a bill to regulate the new technology passed by the state legislature.
  • BlackRock Inc. and Microsoft are teaming up on one of the largest efforts to date to bankroll the build-out of data warehouses and energy infrastructure behind the boom in AI.

Earnings Due Wednesday

  • No major earnings expected

--With assistance from Subrat Patnaik and Ryan Vlastelica.

(Updates with stock move in paragragh two.)

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

Top Videos