Oracle’s Sales Are Soaring, But Its Stock Is Falling. Time to Buy?


Shares of Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) have hit a brutal rough patch in early 2026. After logging astronomical gains last year and reaching a 52-week high of $345.72 in September, the tech giant’s stock has plunged. As of this writing, shares are down about 26% year to date and have shed more than half their value since their September peak.

This sharp decline occurs as a handful of once-soaring artificial intelligence (AI) stocks pause (and, in some cases, pull back) to cool off after their massive rallies. But looking at Oracle’s latest financials, the company’s core operations are generating incredibly strong results.

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So, why did shares fall despite the company reporting record sales growth?

It appears to boil down to the staggering cost of building out the infrastructure required to support the AI boom. With the market grappling with Oracle’s massive new spending plans and recent layoffs, investors have to decide whether this pullback is really a buying opportunity or just a stock move accurately reflecting risks.

The Oracle logo.
Image source: The Motley Fool.

If anyone was worried that Oracle’s expansion was stalling, the company’s fiscal 2026 third-quarter results put those fears to rest.

Highlighting the company’s underlying momentum, Oracle’s total fiscal third-quarter revenue rose 22% year over year to $17.2 billion. The growth driver? Insatiable demand for its cloud services.

Total cloud revenue jumped 44% to $8.9 billion. But the real star of the show was Oracle’s cloud infrastructure business. Revenue for this critical segment skyrocketed 84% year over year to $4.9 billion, marking a significant acceleration from previous quarters.

This top-line momentum translated nicely to the bottom line, with non-GAAP (adjusted) earnings per share rising 21% to $1.79. It was the first time in over 15 years that Oracle achieved 20% or better growth in both organic revenue and non-GAAP earnings simultaneously.

However, the most compelling aspect of Oracle’s trajectory is its massive pipeline. The tech giant’s remaining performance obligations (RPO) — a metric that captures contracted sales not yet recognized — reached $553 billion in fiscal Q3. That is a jaw-dropping 325% year-over-year increase, driven almost entirely by large-scale AI agreements.

But this is where things get complicated, and why investors have been selling the stock.



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