Right now, Oracle has an almost theatrical quality. The company’s name dominated business headlines in a way that seemed out of proportion to a 1.7 percent decline on Friday, even though the stock closed at 173.28, down three dollars on the day. After months of intermittent negotiations, financing totaling sixteen billion dollars for a Michigan data center had just concluded. Anchoring the bond sale, Pimco acquired about $10 billion of it. Fourteen billion notes with a 7.5 percent coupon that matured in 2045 were moved by Bank of America. And the steel framework of one of the biggest computer campuses ever constructed is beginning to take shape somewhere outside Saline Township, in flat Michigan farmland that most Americans couldn’t locate on a map.
It’s difficult to ignore the inconsistencies. In comparison to the previous year, revenue increased by almost 22%. According to some estimates, the company’s backlog of orders is worth over half a trillion dollars. Nevertheless, word leaked that Oracle was laying off between 20,000 and 30,000 workers, many of whom were longtime employees, the same week the financing closed. Gutting and growth at the same time.
| Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Company | Oracle Corporation |
| Ticker | NYSE: ORCL |
| Current Price (April 27, 2026) | 173.28 USD (−1.70%) |
| Headquarters | Austin, Texas |
| Founded | June 16, 1977, Santa Clara, California |
| Founders | Larry Ellison, Bob Miner, Ed Oates |
| Market Cap | 498.36B |
| P/E Ratio | 31.11 |
| 52-Week High / Low | 345.72 / 130.99 |
| Q3 2026 Revenue | 17.19B (+21.66% YoY) |
| Employees (2025) | 162,000 |
| Dividend Yield | 1.15% |
Given that the Michigan campus will allegedly power workloads for OpenAI, investors appear to think Oracle has positioned itself well for the AI infrastructure wave. Reading between the lines of the bond pricing at 98.75 cents on the dollar, however, suggests that the smart money is posing more challenging queries. A vote of unconditional confidence is not represented by a 7.5 percent coupon. It is the cost of convincing institutional investors that the anticipated future cash flows will occur.
In a sense, Oracle has been here before. During the late 2000s and early 2010s, the company was written off as a slow-moving legacy database vendor that was surpassed by Microsoft and Amazon. For the better part of ten years, 81-year-old Larry Ellison has insisted otherwise. As you watch this develop, you get the impression that he views the AI moment as personal validation—proof that all of the hard work, patience, acquisitions, and unglamorous infrastructure work were leading up to this. It’s another matter entirely whether the market agrees with him. After reaching a high of 345 in September of last year, shares are still down about half.

The overall picture is even more disorganized. Microsoft ended Friday’s trading session up 2.13 percent. The benchmark for AI exuberance, Nvidia, saw a 4.32 percent increase. Oracle took the opposite action. Despite the decline, one analyst cited earlier this week believes there is still room for improvement. Some are unsure. The revenue beat is awkwardly accompanied by the 30,000 layoffs. Despite its ambitious nature, the Michigan project links Oracle’s balance sheet to a single tenant story, and stories change.
Walking through the numbers gives the impression that Oracle is running two races at once, one away from the cost structure of its own past and the other toward a cloud future it fervently wants to own. In 2045, the data center bonds will mature. The decision will have been made by then. For the time being, Saline Township continues to pour concrete while the workers wait and the stock drifts.
