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Oracle Reports Tonight. The Revenue Number Is Not The Question.

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Tonight at 5 PM ET, Oracle drops its fiscal Q4 2026 results.

Wall Street expects $19.1 billion in revenue, up 20% year over year, and $1.97 in earnings per share. Cloud revenue is expected to cross $10 billion for the first time in a single quarter. The remaining performance obligations backlog, which stood at $553 billion at the end of Q3, is expected to grow to approximately $589.5 billion, up 327% year over year.

Those are large numbers. And if history holds, Oracle will probably hit them. The company has beaten consensus EPS in four consecutive quarters, including a 15% upside surprise in Q3. A beat tonight is the base case.

That is also not what tonight is actually about.

What Oracle Has Built

Twelve months ago Oracle was a legacy database company with a credible but unspectacular cloud story. Today it is one of the most aggressive AI infrastructure buildouts in enterprise tech, with a backlog larger than the GDP of Argentina and a capital structure to match.

In Q3 FY2026, OCI revenue grew 84% year over year to $4.9 billion. Multicloud database revenue grew 531%. AI infrastructure revenue grew 243%. These are the results of Oracle signing large-scale contracts with customers that include OpenAI, Nvidia, and TikTok US, in which Oracle now holds a 15% equity stake.

To fund the data centers required to fulfill those contracts, Oracle raised $30 billion through investment-grade bonds and mandatory convertible preferred stock in February. Total capex guidance for FY2026 is $50 billion. The company has raised its FY2027 revenue target to $90 billion, 34% growth from the $67 billion it expects to close this fiscal year.

This sets up the specific question for tonight: at what point does the backlog become cash?

The Real Number To Watch

Remaining performance obligations represent contracts signed but not yet delivered. Oracle’s $553 billion figure is extraordinary. The problem with a very large RPO is that it is not revenue. It is a promise. Tonight, the market wants to know how quickly that promise is being kept.

On the Q3 call, Oracle’s CEO Clay Magouyrk gave specific delivery numbers. The company delivered more than 400 megawatts of compute capacity to customers in Q3. 90% of committed capacity was delivered on or ahead of schedule. Time from rack delivery to revenue had been reduced by 60% in the preceding months.

Those are the right signals. But the gap between the $553 billion backlog and the $8.9 billion in quarterly cloud revenue remains enormous. If delivery is accelerating, the gap narrows and the bull case strengthens. If it is not, the same backlog starts to look like a production problem.

The bear case has nothing to do with demand. Oracle has more demand than it can currently serve. The bear case is entirely about whether the infrastructure can be built and turned on fast enough to matter before the cost of building it starts to bite.

The Capital Structure Argument

Oracle management made a notable point on the Q3 call. Greater than 90% of data center capacity coming online over the next three years is fully funded through partners, meaning customers who pay upfront or bring their own hardware. Since Q3, Oracle signed more than $29 billion in new contracts using this capital-light model.

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