Oracle (ORCL) Stock Jumps 10% Premarket on Earnings Beat and Strong Cloud Growth
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Oracle (ORCL) Stock Jumps 10% Premarket on Earnings Beat and Strong Cloud Growth

Oracle stock jumped nearly 10% after the company beat Q3 earnings estimates and raised its fiscal 2027 revenue outlook.
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Oracle Corporation (ORCL) shares surged as much as 10% in premarket trading on Wednesday after the enterprise software and cloud infrastructure giant delivered a sweeping beat across all key metrics for its fiscal third quarter ended February 28, 2026.

The company reported adjusted earnings per share of $1.79, handily topping Wall Street’s consensus estimate of $1.70 and representing a sharp improvement from $1.47 in the same period a year ago. Revenue climbed 22% year over year to $17.19 billion, surpassing analyst expectations of $16.91 billion, driven by an explosive 44% surge in cloud revenue.

Adding further fuel to investor enthusiasm, Oracle raised its fiscal 2027 revenue outlook by $1 billion to $90 billion, well ahead of the $86.6 billion analysts had anticipated.

Strong Cloud Growth and Raised Guidance Drive Oracle Earnings Beat

Oracle’s fiscal Q3 results delivered an across-the-board beat that caught even skeptical investors off guard. Net income rose to $3.72 billion, or $1.27 per share on a GAAP basis, up from $2.94 billion, or $1.02 per share, in the year-ago quarter, while total cloud revenue, encompassing both infrastructure and software as a service, reached $8.9 billion, exceeding the $8.85 billion analyst consensus.

Cloud infrastructure revenue alone posted a staggering 84% year-over-year increase to $4.9 billion, accelerating from the already impressive 68% growth recorded in the prior quarter, with notable new cloud business from Air France-KLM, Lockheed Martin, SoftBank Corp., and Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard subsidiary.

Perhaps the most striking forward-looking signal was Oracle’s remaining performance obligations, which more than quadrupled to $553 billion from a year earlier, roughly $300 billion of which is tied to a single multiyear contract with OpenAI, representing one of the clearest indicators of future revenue visibility a company of Oracle’s scale can offer.

Management also raised its fiscal fourth-quarter guidance to $1.92–$1.96 in adjusted EPS with revenue growth of 19–20%, comfortably ahead of the $1.70 per share consensus, and pushed the full-year fiscal 2027 revenue forecast to $90 billion. “That’s why we think we’re a disruptor,” Oracle co-founder and executive chairman Larry Ellison said on the earnings call, pointing to the company’s AI-powered software development capabilities as a key competitive differentiator.

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ORCL Stock Brief: Premarket Surge and Market Performance

ORCL shares were quoted at $163.89 in premarket trading as of 5:09 AM EDT on March 11, 2026, a gain of $14.40, or +9.63%, after closing the prior session at $149.40, itself a decline of $2.16, or -1.43%, on March 10. The premarket pop follows a brutal stretch for the stock, which had fallen more than 50% from its September 2025 highs amid broader concerns about AI investment sustainability and Oracle’s mounting debt load, and entered Tuesday’s session down approximately 23% year-to-date compared to a less-than-1% decline for the S&P 500 over the same period.

The stock’s 52-week range spans $118.86 to $345.72, and its current market capitalization stands at approximately $429.4 billion, with a trailing P/E ratio of 28.08 and a one-year analyst price target average of $248.55, suggesting significant upside potential even after the premarket rally.

Key risks remain, however: Oracle generated $7 billion in operating cash flow during the quarter but spent $19 billion on data center capital expenditures, resulting in negative free cash flow of approximately $13.18 billion over the trailing twelve months, and the company added $27 billion in new debt during the quarter, bringing its total debt load to $135 billion.

Analysts remain broadly constructive — Baird maintained its Outperform rating on March 10, Mizuho holds the top analyst ranking with an Outperform rating, and the consensus price target of $248.55 sits well above current levels — though the bull case hinges on Oracle’s massive contracted backlog converting to recognized revenue as AI infrastructure demand continues to accelerate through at least 2027.

Disclaimer: The author does not hold or have a position in any securities discussed in the article. All stock prices were quoted at the time of writing.