Oracle's planned $90 billion to $95 billion in capital expenditures for fiscal 2027 represents a bet on AI infrastructure that few hyperscalers have matched — and one the stock market may not be fully pricing in.
Oracle's fiscal 2026 annual report, filed with the SEC in late June, shows capital expenditures surged to $55.7 billion for the year ended May 2026, more than doubling from $21.2 billion in fiscal 2025. The company is guiding to $90 billion to $95 billion in capex for fiscal 2027, a trajectory that would make Oracle one of the most aggressive spenders in the AI infrastructure arms race.
"To grow our OCI business, which requires increased computing capacity, we must incur significant capital and operating expenditures," Oracle wrote in the filing, which also listed dozens of specific risks tied to the buildout — including construction delays, GPU and power shortages, customer credit exposure, and regulatory hurdles.
The spending is anchored by major capacity commitments to OpenAI and Meta, as well as Oracle's role as a partner in the Stargate data-center project alongside OpenAI and SoftBank, a venture that could invest up to $500 billion over the coming years. Oracle's Infrastructure as a Service revenue rose more than 90 percent year over year in the fiscal fourth quarter, according to Mizuho, as the Abilene supercluster and additional capacity came online on schedule.
The Risk Disclosure as a Sector Checklist
Oracle's annual filing stands out not for the size of its capex alone but for the granularity of its risk enumeration. The company warned of overbuilding, customer defaults, stranded capacity, power shortages, GPU supply constraints, permitting delays, tariff exposure, and export-control risks — a catalog that functions as a sector-wide template for evaluating AI infrastructure economics.
The counterparty risk is particularly notable. Oracle explicitly flagged that some customers "may be highly leveraged" and that the company could face "risks of non-payment and non-performance." That disclosure carries weight given that AI labs such as OpenAI and Anthropic continue to spend well beyond their revenue, according to public financial disclosures.
Oracle shares have fallen roughly 40 percent over the past month amid broader investor caution about AI infrastructure spending. The selloff has affected the sector broadly, with Nvidia also declining during the same period.
Wall Street Sees Upside Despite the Selloff
KeyBanc reiterated its Overweight rating on Oracle with a $300 price target on June 23, noting more transparency on the company's expenditure outlook. The firm boosted its EPS estimates for fiscal years 2028 through 2030, exceeding consensus expectations for 2029 and 2030. KeyBanc highlighted that moderate growth in operating expenses appeared sufficient to offset gross margin pressures from the hyperscaler infrastructure investment.
Mizuho reaffirmed an Outperform rating and a $320 price target following Oracle's fourth-quarter results, citing solid performance with IaaS revenue increasing more than 90 percent year over year. Oracle disclosed incremental financing needs of $20 billion, up from the $50 billion reported in the fiscal third quarter but well below the $100 billion that some Street estimates had anticipated.
At roughly $142.50 per share, Oracle trades at a significant discount to the analyst targets of $300 to $320, implying potential upside of more than 100 percent if the AI infrastructure thesis plays out as management expects. The question for investors is whether the market's caution reflects prudent skepticism about the risks Oracle itself has catalogued — or a failure to grasp the scale of demand that is driving the company's spending.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.