Oracle’s stock got slammed with a 7% drop on Friday, the company’s worst single-day loss since January, just one day after laying out a flashy new AI-driven roadmap at its Las Vegas AI World 0 brutal reversal came even as the S&P 500, Nasdaq, and Dow Jones Industrial Average all finished the day solidly in the green, with the Dow jumping 345 points and tech climbing steadily throughout the 1 sell-off followed an overly ambitious forecast delivered by Oracle’s executives on Thursday, where they claimed the company would hit $225 billion in total revenue and pull in $166 billion from cloud infrastructure alone by fiscal 2030. That’s up from just $18 billion expected in 2 also projected $21 in adjusted earnings per share, implying over 31% annual revenue growth.
Initially, investors were 3 ORCL surged by 3.1% Thursday, capping a two-year run that’s more than doubled Oracle’s market 4 by Friday morning, reality kicked in, and so did the 5 buy the dip on banks as Oracle faces tough questions While Oracle bled out, the rest of the market rebounded from Thursday’s banking 6 Dow climbed 0.8%, and both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite gained 0.7%. According to CNBC, the broader rally got a push from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who said he’d speak with his Chinese counterpart Friday night. meanwhile, President Donald Trump, speaking from the White House, confirmed a meeting with President Xi Jinping was still on track for later this month, as Cryptopolitan 7 helped take the edge off fears over 100% tariffs that were supposed to hit Chinese goods on November 8 rebound came just a day after the Dow tanked 300 points, with the S&P 500 down 0.6% thanks to a brutal banking 9 SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE) lost over 6%, continuing a four-week losing streak triggered by fresh stress in regional 10 and First Brands, two auto-linked companies, recently filed for bankruptcy, raising new fears about loan 11 Friday, KRE had bounced back 1.5%, though still off 2% for the week.
Oracle’s AI ambition rattles confidence despite big numbers Despite the crash, Oracle remains neck-deep in the AI infrastructure 12 company announced a five-year, $300 billion deal with OpenAI to supply AI chips and cloud 13 its September earnings report, Cryptopolitan reported that ORCL rallied hard in what became its best trading day since 1992, driven by news of $455 billion in remaining performance obligations, up 359% 14 Thursday, execs also said AI-related margins would sit between 30% and 40%, higher than most 15 skepticism quickly caught 16 Keirstead, analyst at UBS, raised his price target to $380 from $360, arguing the stock’s current price, $291.37, doesn’t reflect the full AI 17 Karl also warned about over-reliance on OpenAI, and flagged “go-live bottlenecks” as a real threat if Oracle pushes expansion too aggressively.
Still, Clay Magouyrk, one of Oracle’s newly appointed co-CEOs, pushed back hard against the idea that OpenAI is the company’s only AI partner. “None of those customers are OpenAI,” Clay said, referencing seven new contracts signed this quarter across four different clients. “I know some people are questioning sometimes, ‘Hey, is it just OpenAI?’ The reality is, we think OpenAI is a great customer, but we have many customers.” Want your project in front of crypto’s top minds? Feature it in our next industry report, where data meets impact.
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