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Oracle’s massive AI cloud bet draws scrutiny after $50B financing push

Oracle reported its third-quarter earnings on Tuesday, with investors treating the results as an important signal for the artificial intelligence trade.

The company has been expanding its cloud infrastructure to support AI computing demand, a strategy that has required heavy capital investment.

Markets are watching how the strategy affects financing, shareholder dilution, and Oracle’s ability to deliver infrastructure to OpenAI.

AI cloud investment

Oracle’s expansion into artificial intelligence cloud services has required extensive funding.

In early February, the company announced a $50 billion financing plan combining debt and equity.

The move underscored the scale of its infrastructure ambitions.

Building data centres capable of supporting advanced AI workloads requires specialised chips, networking systems, and large facilities designed to manage energy-intensive computing.

Among major cloud providers pursuing artificial intelligence, Oracle has relied more heavily on financing to support these projects.

The company’s most recent capital raise included a $5 billion convertible preferred offering and about $25 billion in senior notes issued at multiple maturities.

Demand for the offering was strong. The financing was oversubscribed, indicating investor appetite for debt linked to companies expanding AI infrastructure.

OpenAI infrastructure plans

Oracle’s ability to deliver computing capacity to OpenAI has become a key focus for investors following the funding announcement.

OpenAI develops advanced artificial intelligence models and requires large amounts of cloud infrastructure to support its systems.

The partnership reflects a broader shift across the technology sector as cloud providers compete to build the computing backbone needed to support artificial intelligence development.

AI systems require vast clusters of specialised chips connected through high speed networking equipment.

Companies building these systems are racing to secure enough computing power to train and deploy increasingly complex models.

Expansion across US

OpenAI executive Sachin Katti addressed the company’s infrastructure strategy in a post on X, explaining that additional computing capacity will be distributed across multiple locations in the US.

https://twitter.com/Oracle/status/2030836138194129070

He wrote that the company is developing more than half a dozen sites across several states as part of its infrastructure network.

One project is a facility being built with Oracle in Wisconsin. Katti said the first steel beams at the site were installed earlier this week, marking progress on construction.

Katti oversees OpenAI’s compute infrastructure and previously served as artificial intelligence chief and chief technology officer at Intel.

Investors track AI spending

Oracle’s earnings report is expected to provide insight into how quickly the company plans to deploy its AI infrastructure investments.

Investors are also monitoring the cadence of financing following the company’s $50 billion funding announcement earlier this year.

The results may reveal how Oracle balances infrastructure spending with the financial demands of building large-scale data centre networks.

The earnings release will be closely watched as markets assess whether Oracle’s AI cloud expansion can keep pace with demand from companies developing the next generation of artificial intelligence systems.

The post Oracle’s massive AI cloud bet draws scrutiny after $50B financing push appeared first on Invezz

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