Yazılar

Oracle appoints Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia as co-CEOs, Safra Catz steps aside

Oracle announced a surprise leadership shakeup on Monday, naming insiders Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia as co-CEOs, replacing longtime chief executive Safra Catz. Catz, who helped transform Oracle into a cloud powerhouse over her 11-year tenure, will remain with the company as vice chair of the board.

Catz’s legacy includes steering Oracle from its roots as a database provider into a global competitor in cloud computing, securing massive AI-related contracts, and driving the company’s market capitalization close to $1 trillion. Shares of Oracle have soared about 85% this year, outpacing rivals Microsoft and Alphabet, buoyed by the AI boom.

  • Mike Sicilia (54) currently oversees Oracle’s cloud-based applications and AI products.

  • Clay Magouyrk (39) manages Oracle’s cloud infrastructure platform, which underpins the company’s AI and data services.

Both executives are well-known to investors, and analysts say their promotion highlights cloud and industry solutions as Oracle’s main growth engines. Evercore ISI noted that with co-founder Larry Ellison staying on as CTO and Catz as executive vice chair, the leadership transition should be smooth.

Oracle is currently central to U.S. data security discussions, hosting TikTok’s U.S. user data on its cloud systems. The company also recently signed one of the largest cloud deals in history with OpenAI, worth an estimated $300 billion in computing power over five years.

Safra Catz, one of the most influential women in tech, first became co-CEO alongside the late Mark Hurd in 2014 after Ellison stepped back from daily operations. Under her leadership, Oracle shares climbed more than 586%. Trained in finance and law, Catz joined Oracle in 1999 after a career on Wall Street and today holds a net worth of $3.3 billion, according to Forbes.

Magouyrk, who joined Oracle from Amazon Web Services in 2014, will receive stock options worth $250 million, while Sicilia, who came via Oracle’s acquisition of Primavera Systems, will receive $100 million in stock options.

The co-CEO model, while less common, is being adopted by several global firms, including investment giant KKR and, briefly, Intel. For Oracle, the dual leadership underscores the scale of its ambitions as cloud and AI reshape the tech landscape.

Trump says Murdoch, Ellison, Dell lined up as investors in TikTok U.S. deal

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Sunday that Lachlan Murdoch, Larry Ellison, and Michael Dell would be among the American investors involved in a proposed deal to keep TikTok operating in the United States.

The arrangement is part of ongoing negotiations to transfer TikTok’s U.S. assets away from China’s ByteDance to a U.S.-controlled entity. The app, with 170 million U.S. users, has been at the center of Washington’s national security concerns and a 2024 law requiring divestiture by January 2025.

Key details of the proposed deal:

  • Ownership structure: TikTok’s U.S. operations would be majority-owned by American investors, with ByteDance holding under 20% of shares.

  • Governance: The U.S. entity would be operated domestically by a board with national security and cybersecurity credentials.

  • Investors:

    • Lachlan Murdoch, CEO of Fox Corp, through Fox (not personally). Rupert Murdoch, 94, may also play a role.

    • Larry Ellison, Oracle co-founder and major Republican donor, has long been linked to TikTok negotiations.

    • Michael Dell, CEO of Dell Technologies.

  • Data & algorithm safeguards: All U.S. user data will be stored on Oracle cloud infrastructure, with TikTok’s algorithm retrained and operated under U.S. supervision outside of ByteDance’s control.

Trump’s comments:

Trump praised the investors on Fox News’ The Sunday Briefing, calling them “American patriots” and saying, “I think they’re going to do a really good job.” He also credited TikTok with helping him build youth voter support during the 2024 election.

Political and economic context:

  • The deal remains under scrutiny by Congress, with Democrats warning against giving Beijing influence or allowing Trump’s allies too much control.

  • Trump has delayed enforcement of the shutdown law until December, with a possible extension into April 2025 to finalize terms.

  • The deal is being folded into broader U.S.-China economic talks, reflecting Trump’s transactional approach.

  • It follows other unusual Trump administration interventions in business, such as taking a 10% U.S. stake in Intel and approving Nvidia chip sales to China in exchange for a cut of sales.

Critics argue these maneuvers deviate from free-market norms, while Trump insists they strengthen U.S. leverage and protect national interests.

Larry Ellison reemerges as tech and media power player

Forty-eight years after co-founding Oracle, Larry Ellison is once again at the center of global business headlines. Oracle’s stock surged 35.9% on the back of blockbuster cloud computing deals tied to AI, propelling Ellison’s net worth to nearly $400 billion—second only to Elon Musk.

Adding to his influence, Ellison’s family-controlled Paramount is preparing a bid for Warner Bros Discovery, a move that could dramatically reshape Hollywood. At the same time, his son David Ellison has begun steering CBS News with a more conservative tilt, hiring former Hudson Institute CEO Kenneth Weinstein as ombudsman and reportedly courting journalist Bari Weiss for a leadership role.

Ellison has also entrenched Oracle in the TikTok saga, providing U.S. infrastructure for the Chinese-owned app since 2022 amid national security scrutiny. Behind the flash of yachts, Hawaiian islands, and movie cameos—he played himself in Iron Man 2—Ellison has steadily bet big on AI.

Oracle became a major AI landlord, securing marquee clients including Meta, Elon Musk’s xAI, and OpenAI, which committed to a $300 billion compute deal over five years. This pivot helped Oracle’s booked revenue soar more than four-fold to $455 billion.

Unlike rivals Microsoft, Amazon, and Google, Oracle chose not to build custom AI chips, instead deepening ties with Nvidia. At a 2024 dinner with Musk and Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, Ellison reportedly said, “Please take our money”—and soon after, Oracle secured GPU supplies that fueled the Stargate project with OpenAI.

Oracle’s cloud revival—after a failed 2016 launch—has proven cheaper and more adaptable. Its rapid scaling during the Zoom pandemic traffic surge and smooth takeover of TikTok’s U.S. user data in 2022 highlighted technical strength.

Still, huge risks remain. Oracle outsources critical infrastructure like land, data centers, and power, making it reliant on partners. Analysts warn that dependence on a small group of AI clients—particularly OpenAI—could expose Oracle to shocks if those firms stumble.

Ellison’s career has long swung between hubris and vindication, but with AI reshaping the tech landscape, the Silicon Valley “bad boy” may yet have the last laugh.