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The Quiet Giant That Became AI’s Power Grid

Published
24 Nov 25
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The story of Oracle’s transformation is a narrative of strategic repositioning that has culminated in the company emerging as an indispensable infrastructure partner for the world’s most demanding Artificial Intelligence (AI) workloads. This strategic shift, defined by massive infrastructure investment, a landmark partnership with OpenAI, and the rise of colossal superclusters, has driven an unprecedented surge in its contract backlog, fundamentally reshaping Oracle’s long-term growth trajectory and competitive landscape.

Chapter 1: The Validation, OpenAI and the Rise of the Supercluster

The foundation of Oracle’s AI narrative rests on its Gen2 AI infrastructure and the validation it received from the premier generative AI powerhouse, OpenAI. In 2024, OpenAI made headlines by expanding its cloud footprint to include Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI), a move described as strategic, reflecting the growing demand for massive compute power and the need for multi-cloud resilience. This partnership positioned OCI as a key extension of the Microsoft Azure AI platform.

To support the scaling of ChatGPT and future models, OpenAI began leveraging OCI Superclusters, which are capable of scaling up to 32,768 Nvidia GPUs per cluster. This immense capability is critical for training and fine-tuning cutting-edge large language models (LLMs).

For Oracle, winning this business was more than just a client acquisition; it was a powerful endorsement and validation that its Gen2 AI infrastructure could compete head-to-head with the largest hyperscalers on both performance and cost-effectiveness. Oracle Chairman and CTO Larry Ellison emphasized that leaders like OpenAI are choosing OCI because it is the world’s fastest and most cost-effective AI infrastructure, fueling "unlimited demand".

The physical manifestation of this ambition is staggering. Oracle is building gigawatt-scale data centers. One massive 1,100-acre campus in Abilene, Texas, featuring eight buildings, is dedicated initially to OpenAI workloads. Once finalized, this will be the largest supercomputer ever constructed, functioning as a single giant supercluster networked together by massive interconnections. The workloads for OpenAI at this site went live in less than a year after construction began.

Chapter 2: The Metrics Explode, RPO and the Inference Inflection

The strategic success and validation immediately translated into stunning financial results, signaling that AI demand had transitioned from potential hype to undeniable reality.

In the fiscal 2026 Q1 results (reported September 9, 2025), Oracle announced that its Remaining Performance Obligations (RPO) a key indicator of future contracted revenue—had surged to $455 billion, representing a staggering 359% year-over-year increase. This RPO balance is up nearly 10x since FY2022. Oracle CEO Safra Catz noted that this resulted from signing four multi-billion-dollar contracts with three different customers in Q1. Furthermore, Oracle expects RPO to likely exceed half-a-trillion dollars soon, having already passed that mark early in Q2.

Crucially, this surge is driven by a macro trend: the explosion of inference demand. While model training initially dominated the AI narrative, inference, the actual deployment of AI into real-world applications and workflows, is perpetually scaling with every interaction and is now confirmed as the true driver of sustained economic impact. Larry Ellison confirmed this as "insatiable demand" for Oracle’s Gen2 AI infrastructure. The scale of this demand is extraordinary; for instance, in 30 days during Q2, Oracle contracted $65 billion in IaaS TCV (Total Contract Value) across seven deals with four customers, none of whom were OpenAI.

The sheer size of Oracle’s contracted pipeline, which saw an increase in backlog nearly equivalent to the quarterly increase in U.S. nominal GDP, confirms that the company’s infrastructure is meeting critical, explosive market demand.

Chapter 3: Long-Term Growth, Competitive Edge, and the Whole Stack Advantage

The dramatic RPO growth has led Oracle to accelerate its long-term financial targets, repositioning the company as a "hypergrowth company".

Long-Term Growth Forecasts (Updated October 2025):

Total Revenue Target: Projected to reach $225 billion by fiscal year 2030, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of over 31%.

OCI Infrastructure Revenue: Projected to grow rapidly, reaching $166 billion by FY2030 (a 71% 5-year CAGR).

EPS Target: Projected to reach $21 by fiscal year 2030 (a 28% 5-year CAGR).

Oracle’s competitive edge is defined by the "One Oracle Advantage": the synergistic integration of its infrastructure, database, and application layers.

1. AI Infrastructure Leadership: OCI is supply-constrained, not demand-constrained. The ability to rapidly deliver the latest accelerators and efficient data center designs positions OCI as a destination cloud for compute-intensive workloads. The multi-cloud environment is essential, and Oracle is actively collaborating: its MultiCloud Database revenue from Amazon, Google, and Microsoft grew at an "incredible rate" of 1,529% in Q1 FY26.

2. The AI Database Platform: Oracle’s new AI Database enables customers to use their preferred LLMs (like ChatGPT or Google Gemini) to reason on their private data (e.g., trading records, genomic data) while maintaining strict security. This platform is projected to be a massive growth driver, with a revenue target of $20 billion by FY2030.

3. Application Dominance through AI Agents: The infrastructure strength fuels Oracle’s application business (Fusion, Health, Banking). The applications are quickly becoming collections of AI agents. Oracle delivered over 600 AI agents in Fusion and industry verticals. This embedded AI is already driving massive ROI, such as a 50% return on time spent in healthcare applications within three weeks of go-live.

This layered strategy ensures that customers who adopt multiple "pillars" (Infrastructure, Data, Applications) spend dramatically more those utilizing the full stack spend on average 150 times more than those using a single product pillar.

Chapter 4: Competitive Risks

Despite the momentum, Oracle faces significant risks, primarily related to execution and market perception.

1. Execution and Supply Constraints: The massive growth forecast is predicated on Oracle’s ability to execute on its massive build-out. Oracle acknowledges that the biggest impediment to growth is turning demand into revenue by delivering capacity faster and faster. This requires securing good supply across land, energy, hardware, and capital.

2. Market Disbelief: Despite the clear financial signals—the RPO surge, the explosive growth of cloud infrastructure (up 55% in Q1 FY26), and the economic shift toward inference—investor and macroeconomist skepticism about the reality of AI-driven growth persists. The market still clings to disbelief, which creates an ongoing risk of episodic volatility.

3. AI Project Failure Rates: Gartner warns that 30% of generative AI initiatives initiated in early 2025 are likely to be abandoned due to factors like high costs or poor data quality, underscoring the high execution risk inherent in the booming AI market.

Oracle's story is one of a rapid, aggressive transition from enterprise stalwart to AI infrastructure leader, where the OpenAI partnership validated the underlying technology, the supercluster buildout created the necessary supply, and the RPO surge quantified the insatiable demand, collectively creating a "whole stack" advantage that secures Oracle’s competitive position and projected hypergrowth.

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Disclaimer

TickerTickle is an employee of Simply Wall St, but has written this narrative in their capacity as an individual investor. TickerTickle holds no position in NYSE:ORCL. Simply Wall St has no position in the company(s) mentioned. Simply Wall St may provide the securities issuer or related entities with website advertising services for a fee, on an arm's length basis. These relationships have no impact on the way we conduct our business, the content we host, or how our content is served to users. This narrative is general in nature and explores scenarios and estimates created by the author. The narrative does not reflect the opinions of Simply Wall St, and the views expressed are the opinion of the author alone, acting on their own behalf. These scenarios are not indicative of the company's future performance and are exploratory in the ideas they cover. The fair value estimate's are estimations only, and does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and they do not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. Note that the author's analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material.

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