Navigation menu

Choose an option from the navigation menu below.

Market Analysis

Why ORCL Is Gaining Ground in the AI Infrastructure Story

Oracle has gained renewed attention as the AI boom pushes investors to look beyond chips and consumer-facing software towards the infrastructure needed to support large-scale deployment. In that shift, Oracle has started to look less like a traditional software company and more like a business with a meaningful role in the systems behind enterprise AI.
Much of the change comes from Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. For years, Oracle was mainly associated with database licences and enterprise software contracts that offered stability but limited excitement. The growth of OCI has changed that perception.
As companies spend more on AI, demand has risen for cloud environments that can handle heavy workloads, large data volumes and secure processing. Oracle has been building into exactly that part of the market, which has given investors a stronger reason to pay attention.
Oracle’s role also stands out because it sits in a very practical part of the AI chain. It does not supply chips like NVIDIA, and it does not dominate end-user applications in the way Microsoft does. Its relevance comes from the infrastructure layer, where businesses run workloads and manage data. Many large organisations already keep important information inside Oracle systems, and that creates a natural advantage as AI adoption grows. In many cases, companies would rather build on top of data they already have than take on the cost and disruption of moving it elsewhere.
AI adoption in large companies is rarely just about enthusiasm for new technology. It usually depends on where the data sits, how securely it can be used, and how easily new tools can be added without disrupting existing operations. Oracle already has a place inside that process, which gives it a more grounded connection to the AI story than many market narratives built mainly on momentum.
The financial picture supports that shift as well. Oracle’s overall revenue growth has generally stayed in the high single digits to low double digits, but the composition of that growth has changed noticeably. OCI has been expanding at roughly 30% to 50% year on year, much faster than the rest of the business, while cloud services and support now contribute more than 70% of total revenue. The company still has its legacy businesses, but investors are paying more attention to the parts that offer recurring revenue and clearer long-term expansion.
Explore how cloud growth, data lock-in and sovereign AI demand are strengthening Oracle’s position.
 
Learn More

Publication date: