Oracle signed cloud services deal worth $30 billion a year

(Bloomberg/Brody Ford) — Oracle Corp. signed a cloud services deal that it expects to contribute more than $30 billion in annual revenue starting in the fiscal year 2028.

The contract was revealed in a regulatory filing Monday and didn’t name the customer. Revenue from Oracle’s namesake database that runs on other clouds continues to grow more than 100%, Chief Executive Officer Safra Catz is expected to say at an internal meeting, according to the filing.

Oracle shares jumped as much as 7.4% in premarket trading Monday in New York. They were up 26% this year through Friday’s close, hovering near an all-time high.

Related Articles


Jill On Money: Social insecurity 2033


Federal judge denies OpenAI bid to keep deleting data amid Daily News copyright lawsuit


Apple, Google told DeepSeek app is illegal in Germany


Nvidia breakout puts $4 trillion market value within reach


Supreme Court upholds Texas law aimed at blocking kids from seeing pornography online

In recent years, Oracle has gained traction in the competitive market for renting out computing power over the internet, in part by targeting clients focused on artificial intelligence work. Earlier this year, the company announced a joint venture dubbed Stargate to provide OpenAI with massive sums of computing power. Oracle had previously said this deal wasn’t yet reflected in its financial statements or backlogged orders.

For more: Oracle Hits Record After Seeing ‘Dramatically Higher’ Sales

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2025 Bloomberg L.P.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *