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Oracle Cloud Orders Near $500 Billion, Shares Jump 27%

Oracle (ORCL.N) announced Tuesday that it expects its booked revenue in cloud infrastructure to surpass half a trillion dollars, sending shares soaring 27% after hours. The surge reflects rising demand for its low-cost AI cloud infrastructure and strong multi-cloud partnerships.

Key Highlights

  • Booked Revenue (RPO): Jumped 359% year-on-year to $455 billion in Q1 (ending August 31).

  • Future Growth: CEO Safra Catz said upcoming multi-billion-dollar deals are expected to push RPO beyond $500 billion.

  • Revenue Forecast: Oracle projects 77% growth in OCI revenue this fiscal year to $18B, rising to $144B over the next 4 years.

  • AI Integration: Customers can now directly connect databases to ChatGPT, Gemini, and Grok via Oracle Cloud.

  • MultiCloud Strategy: Partnerships with Amazon, Google, and Microsoft drove a 1,529% increase in first-quarter multi-cloud revenue. Oracle plans 37 new datacenters, bringing the total to 71 with hyperscaler partners.

Market Impact

  • Shares: Up 45% YTD, boosted further by the after-hours spike.

  • Contracts: Four multi-billion-dollar deals with three customers supported overall Q1 revenue growth of 12% to $14.93B.

  • Q2 Guidance: Total revenue expected to rise 12–14%, with cloud revenue growing 32–36%.

Analyst Views

  • Analysts see Oracle emerging as a key AI cloud player, despite being smaller than hyperscaler rivals.

  • “Oracle is not just keeping up but actually leading the way in the cloud space,” said Melissa Otto, S&P Global Visible Alpha.

  • Jacob Bourne, eMarketer: “Enterprises are clearly eager for cost-effective AI cloud tools, and Oracle is positioning itself to capture that demand.”

Google Meet Restores Service After U.S. Outage

Google said its video-conferencing platform, Google Meet, is back online after a disruption earlier on Monday that left thousands of U.S. users unable to access sessions.

The outage caused slow interface loading and blocked users from joining meetings, according to Google. The company traced the problem to a recent change in content edge cache, which it has since rolled back.

At the peak, tracking site Downdetector logged nearly 16,400 incident reports, though the actual number of affected users could have been higher. By 2:43 p.m. ET, reports had dropped to around 600 cases.

Google confirmed the issue was resolved and apologized for the inconvenience, saying normal service has resumed.

EU Slaps Google With $3.45B Antitrust Fine Over Adtech Practices

The European Commission has fined Google €2.95 billion ($3.45 billion) for abusing its dominance in the online advertising technology market, marking the fourth major penalty against the company in a decade-long battle with EU regulators.

The Commission found that since 2014, Google has favored its own ad exchange AdX within the adtech supply chain, charging high fees that disadvantaged rivals and online publishers. Google has been ordered to end self-preferencing and conflicts of interest, with 60 days to present a compliance plan.

EU antitrust chief Teresa Ribera warned that stronger remedies—including a potential breakup—remain on the table if Google fails to make credible changes. “Digital markets exist to serve people and must be grounded in trust and fairness,” Ribera said.

The case has stirred transatlantic tensions. U.S. President Donald Trump blasted the fine as “unfair” and threatened retaliation under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, which allows tariffs on countries that impose “unjustifiable” burdens on U.S. commerce.

Google immediately vowed to appeal, calling the decision “wrong” and arguing it would harm European businesses. “There are more alternatives to our services than ever before,” said Lee-Anne Mulholland, the company’s VP of regulatory affairs.

Critics, including the European Publishers Council, said the fine alone is insufficient. “A fine will not fix Google’s abuse of its adtech,” said executive director Angela Mills Wade, urging a breakup to protect Europe’s struggling media sector.

The penalty follows Google’s previous EU fines: €4.3 billion in 2018, €2.42 billion in 2017, and €1.49 billion in 2019. Meanwhile, Google faces a separate U.S. trial in September after a judge found it holds illegal monopolies in online advertising.

Google’s ad business remains the world’s largest, generating $264.6 billion in 2024, or 76% of Alphabet’s total revenue.