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Oracle shares rise after announcing plans to raise $50 billion


Data center giant Oracle‘s stock rose 5% in premarket on Monday, after the company announced plans to raise up to $50 billion to develop additional capacity for customers.

Hyperscalers have scrambled to build the infrastructure needed to power AI, with data center deals hitting a record $61 billion in 2025 and multiple big tech firms committing huge sums amid a funding rush.

Why the stock rose

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Oracle stock over the past year.

Oracle has made huge bets on the AI infrastructure rollout in recent times. In September, it raised $18 billion in a bond sale and inked a $300 billion deal with OpenAI.

Investors have flagged concerns over Oracle’s aggressive AI buildout plans and debt raising.

Oracle’s stock has dropped 50% since its peak in September. It dropped 11% after disappointing quarterly results in December, when it posted slightly lower than expected revenue.

“We’re entering the end-game for AI exposed stocks, it’s do or die and what we’re seeing is many firms, like Oracle and Microsoft go all-in on the technology,” Michael Field, chief equity strategist at Morningstar, told CNBC as Oracle’s stock struggled on Monday.

He added that the likely binary outcome of this massive investment is forcing investors to either back stocks or sell them.

“The problem for Oracle,” Field added, is that it’s “diluting the holding of existing shareholders and taking more debt to fuel this investment, hence the dismay by investors.”

AI data buildout is a flashpoint this earnings season

On Thursday, Microsoft shares tumbled 10% after investors latched onto the growth of its cloud computing platform Azure and other cloud services falling slightly below expectations, though many analysts remained bullish. Meta stocks jumped 8% after reporting huge AI spending the same day.



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