Overview:
Oracle's $198.50 opening price places it near the lower end of its intraday range of $198.18 to $212.48, with volume running at 38.94M shares against a 27.32M daily average — a clear sign institutional money is actively repricing the dilution risk from a $20B capital raise. Q4 cloud infrastructure revenue rose 93% year-over-year and the company's $638B backlog suggests demand is structurally intact, but a projected negative free cash flow of $23.7B in FY2026 and $70B in planned FY2027 capex are
NEW YORK — Oracle opened at $198.50 Thursday morning, facing the market’s verdict on an earnings beat that somehow still sent shares lower — the clearest sign yet that for AI infrastructure names, execution is no longer enough if the balance sheet cost is this high.
A Mixed Open on a Complicated Morning
The S&P 500 opened at 7,306, up 0.54% from Wednesday’s close, attempting a partial recovery after the index lost 1.62% the prior session. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.45% at the open. The Nasdaq, weighed down by continued AI valuation pressure, gained just 0.26% — a notably thin advance given the index’s recent trajectory. The Russell 2000 moved in the opposite direction entirely, falling 1.10%, a divergence that signals risk appetite is narrowing rather than broadening.
Wednesday’s session was ugly across the board: eight of eleven S&P sectors finished lower, with technology, industrials, and materials leading declines. That selling pressure did not disappear overnight. It has simply been partially offset by short-covering and dip buyers in large-cap tech. Traders should treat the morning’s green as tentative rather than decisive — the geopolitical backdrop has not improved, and the fundamental questions around AI spending multiples remain unanswered.
The Middle East escalation is the second variable hanging over the tape this morning. U.S. Central Command struck Iranian military targets, and Tehran responded with strikes on Gulf nations Thursday. That sequence raises the risk premium on oil, disrupts regional supply chains, and historically compresses equity multiples during the initial phase of escalation — particularly in growth and technology names already trading at stretched valuations.
Oracle’s Opening Bell Standout — The Beat That Didn’t Matter
Oracle opened at $198.50, trading in an intraday range of $198.18 to $212.48. Volume surged to 38.94 million shares against a daily average of 27.32 million — approximately 43% above normal — with the elevated activity concentrated in the opening minutes as institutions worked through the post-earnings price discovery. That volume profile is consistent with forced repositioning, not confident accumulation.
The earnings themselves were genuinely strong. Oracle reported Q4 FY2026 revenue of $19.18 billion, up 21% year-over-year and slightly ahead of the $19.10 billion consensus. Non-GAAP EPS of $2.11 beat the $1.89 estimate by 11.64%. Cloud revenue grew 47% to $9.9 billion, and cloud infrastructure revenue — the IaaS segment that underpins the AI buildout thesis — rose 93%. The company delivered 1.2 gigawatts of data center capacity in the quarter. For full fiscal year 2026, Oracle posted revenue of $67.36 billion, up 17.35%, and earnings of $16.98 billion, up 36.49%.
So why is the stock down? The answer is the capital raise. Oracle announced plans to raise approximately $20 billion through a combination of equity and debt offerings to fund AI expansion. Combined with $55.7 billion in FY2026 capital expenditure and guidance for up to $95 billion in FY2027 capex, the company generated negative free cash flow of $23.7 billion last fiscal year. That is not a rounding error — it is a structural feature of Oracle’s current phase of growth, and the market is demanding a discount to own that uncertainty.
The consensus analyst community, by a ratio of 36-to-1, is still bullish. That matters as a floor, but dilution-driven selloffs in AI infrastructure names have repeatedly defied analyst price targets in the short term even when the long-term thesis held. Oracle’s 52-week range of $134.57 to $345.72 illustrates just how wide the band of outcomes has been for this stock over the past year alone.
What the Volume Is Telling Us
The 38.94 million shares that traded Thursday represent the kind of turnover that rewrites the shareholder register. When a stock trades 43% above its average volume in the first session after earnings, the interpretation is rarely bullish in the short term. Selling pressure of that magnitude typically reflects three distinct cohorts: momentum funds that entered on the AI infrastructure trade and are now cutting on dilution risk; event-driven desks that held through earnings and are distributing; and retail investors reacting to the negative after-hours headlines without digesting the backlog data.
The bid-ask spread in early trading was wide, consistent with a market still finding its price. The $198.18 low marks the first meaningful support level — that is where buyers showed up at the open. The $212.48 intraday high represents the upper bound of what early buyers were willing to pay. The spread between those two levels — roughly 7% — is the uncertainty premium the market is attaching to Oracle’s dilution announcement in real time.
Nvidia’s opening at $204.37, with a range of $198.88 to $207.22, provides an important benchmark. The semiconductor giant gained approximately 1% on the day, suggesting the broader AI infrastructure trade is not broken — it is Oracle-specific dilution causing the pressure, not a wholesale sector rotation away from compute spending. That distinction matters for how traders should position around Oracle’s recovery timeline. As we covered earlier this week, the combination of Iran risk and AI dilution events has been the defining pressure on tech names through this trading week.
The Levels That Will Define the First Hour
Oracle’s recovery — or lack thereof — in the first hour will depend on three levels. The $198 zone is immediate support: a sustained break below it suggests sellers remain in control and the stock is headed toward the $190 area, which corresponds to pre-earnings base support. A hold above $198 into the 10:30 AM ET timeframe would indicate the opening flush absorbed the worst of the institutional selling.
The $205 level is the first meaningful resistance. Above that, Oracle begins to retrace a meaningful portion of its after-hours decline, and the narrative shifts from damage control to recovery. A sustained move through $205 on continued above-average volume would be the first sign that buyers are absorbing the dilution rather than simply absent. The $212 level — the top of this morning’s range — represents the fuller recovery target and would require either a broader market lift or a specific catalyst, such as management commentary clarifying the equity versus debt split in the $20B raise.
The broader market context adds complexity. The SpaceX IPO is scheduled for Friday, June 12 on Nasdaq — an event that could pull institutional capital sideways today as desks manage book exposure ahead of what may be the largest technology listing of the year. That dynamic alone could suppress Oracle’s recovery volume, even if sentiment is turning.
The Middle East escalation has reset the risk calculus for the summer trading period. Against that backdrop, any name that combines dilution risk with elevated capex — Oracle squarely fits both — faces a higher hurdle to sustain a bid. The question traders should be asking is not whether Oracle is a good long-term asset. Most evidence says it is. The question is whether today’s price is the bottom, or simply the first stop on a longer reset.
Watch Levels Into the First Hour
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| ORCL immediate support | $198.00 | Break below signals continued institutional selling; sets up test of $190 pre-earnings base |
| ORCL first-hour resistance | $205.00 | Reclaim on volume above 2M shares/15-min signals buyers absorbing dilution; recovery trade activates |
| ORCL intraday high target | $212.48 | Full morning recovery level; requires broader tape support or management clarity on equity/debt split |
| S&P 500 open level | 7,306 | Hold above confirms partial recovery from Wednesday’s 1.62% loss; failure drags tech sentiment lower |
| Russell 2000 divergence | −1.10% | Small-cap underperformance signals risk appetite is narrowing to mega-cap; breadth concern if it widens |
The morning comes down to this: Oracle’s fundamentals — a $638B backlog, 93% cloud infrastructure growth, and a 36-to-1 buy-to-sell analyst ratio — make a compelling structural case. But the first-hour tape will be decided by the $198 support and whether institutional desks see today’s price as an entry point or a starting line for further distribution. The broader indices are green, geopolitical risk is elevated, and the SpaceX IPO looms a day away. The session is live. Watch the $198 floor.
This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

