OVHcloud Shares Plunge After 2026 Outlook Disappoints Despite Record €1 Billion Revenue
OVHcloud (OVH.PA), Europe’s largest cloud provider, celebrated a major milestone on Tuesday as annual revenue surpassed €1 billion for the first time — yet its weaker-than-expected 2026 forecast sent investors fleeing. Shares plunged 18% by mid-morning, marking what could become the company’s biggest single-day drop ever if losses persist.
The firm reported 9.3% revenue growth for fiscal 2025, reaching €1.08 billion, with an EBITDA margin of 40.4%. However, its 2026 outlook disappointed the market: OVHcloud now expects organic revenue growth of just 5–7%, well below analyst projections of around 10%, according to Stifel and J.P. Morgan.
In response, the company pledged to improve profitability by targeting a higher core profit margin while maintaining capital expenditures at 30–32% of revenue to bolster its Webcloud segment. The results come as founder Octave Klaba returns as CEO, merging his chairman role to lead the company’s next phase of expansion. Klaba, who owns more than 80% of OVHcloud, previously served as CEO until 2018.
Klaba said the firm will focus on meeting rising AI-driven cloud demand and promoting European digital independence amid global tech rivalries. OVHcloud continues to expand globally, citing growing client bases in Canada, Singapore, and India, while remaining a key competitor to Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud.
By segment, Private Cloud accounted for 62% of sales, growing 8.5%, Public Cloud rose 17.5% (20% of revenue), and Webcloud increased 3.7% (18% of total). OVHcloud serves 1.6 million clients, including 1,200 enterprise customers generating over €100,000 in annual recurring revenue.

