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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.”

AT&T to Acquire Lumen’s Consumer Fiber Business for $5.75 Billion in Cash Deal

AT&T has agreed to purchase Lumen Technologies’ consumer fiber business for $5.75 billion, the companies announced Wednesday. The acquisition will give AT&T an additional 1 million fiber customers and bolster its national fiber footprint across several key metro areas.

The deal will significantly expand AT&T’s residential fiber coverage in markets including Denver, Las Vegas, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Orlando, Phoenix, Portland, Salt Lake City, and Seattle, according to an AT&T statement.

Lumen’s shares surged 13% in after-hours trading following the announcement.

Strategic Move for Both Companies

The acquisition:

  • Enhances AT&T’s residential broadband scale amid growing demand for high-speed fiber internet.

  • Allows Lumen to streamline its focus on its enterprise fiber business and invest more aggressively in low-latency infrastructure to support AI and multi-cloud environments.

“The customers are asking us to go faster, which is really to deliver their needs in a multi-cloud, AI-first world,” said Lumen CFO Chris Stansbury in an interview with Reuters.

Financial and Operational Impact

Lumen plans to:

  • Use $4.8 billion of the proceeds to reduce its debt burden.

  • Improve annual cash flow by over $300 million, largely by cutting interest expenses.

For AT&T, the newly acquired assets will be placed into a newly formed subsidiary, in which it plans to sell a minority stake, helping manage risk and capital requirements.

The transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2026, pending regulatory approvals.

Industry Context

The deal underscores the growing value of fiber internet infrastructure, as demand for high-speed, low-latency connectivity increases—particularly to support remote work, streaming, gaming, and AI-related data loads.

Reuters first reported in December that Lumen was exploring the sale of its consumer fiber business, which had been viewed as non-core to its future growth strategy.