Oracle Q4 FY 2026: AI Workloads Accelerate Cloud and Database Growth

Oracle Q4 FY 2026: AI Workloads Accelerate Cloud and Database Growth

Analyst(s): Futurum Research
Publication Date: June 12, 2026

Oracle’s Q4 FY 2026 results showed that AI-oriented cloud infrastructure demand is driving faster growth and a larger backlog, alongside steady cloud application execution. The quarter also increased attention on the cost and timing of data center build-outs and the related funding plan.

What Is Covered in This Article:

  • Oracle’s Q4 FY 2026 financial results
  • AI infrastructure contracts and capacity delivery
  • Agentic AI product packaging and pricing
  • Multicloud database growth and positioning
  • Guidance and Final Thoughts

The News: Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) reported Q4 FY 2026 results with total revenue of $19.18 billion, up 21% year over year (YoY), versus consensus of $19.09 billion. Total cloud revenue was $9.91 billion, up 47% YoY, with cloud infrastructure revenue of $5.79 billion, up 93% YoY, and cloud applications revenue of $4.13 billion, up 10% YoY. Non-GAAP operating income was $8.59 billion, up 22% YoY, with non-GAAP operating margin of 45% (Q4 FY 2025: 44%). Non-GAAP net income was $6.23 billion, up 28% YoY, and non-GAAP diluted earnings per share was $2.11, up 24% YoY. Remaining performance obligations ended at $638 billion, up 363% YoY.

“Oracle is now uniquely positioned for one of the most significant technology transitions we’ve seen in decades,” said Hilary Maxson, CFO of Oracle. “Very few companies can help customers across the entire technology stack, from the cloud infrastructure that powers AI workloads to the mission-critical applications that run their businesses.”

Oracle Q4 FY 2026: AI Workloads Accelerate Cloud and Database Growth

Analyst Take: Oracle’s Q4 FY 2026 setup is defined by two forces moving in parallel: fast-growing AI-related infrastructure demand and the monetization transition happening inside enterprise applications. The revenue profile is increasingly shaped by infrastructure scale, while profitability optics will hinge on execution against capacity delivery and cost controls. The quarter also showed Oracle trying to remove buyer friction around AI adoption by packaging agentic capability in simpler commercial structures. The backlog level creates visibility, but it also forces a different conversation with customers and investors about capital intensity and timing.

AI Infrastructure Demand, Renewals, and Utilization

Oracle tied infrastructure demand directly to large AI infrastructure contracting, including a mix of customer-prepaid and customer-supplied hardware structures. It disclosed $67 billion of AI infrastructure contracts signed in the quarter and $75 billion in total prepaid or customer-supplied hardware across large AI contracts. The company positioned its infrastructure model as multi-tenant and emphasized reallocation dynamics when customers do not renew, rather than leaving capacity idle. It reported that 35,000 GPUs across 59 customers came up for renewal, with 49% of customers renewing for 92% of those GPUs, and stated global GPU utilization at 97.5%. The operational message was that service reliability and day-to-day operation of large clusters drive renewals more than pricing optics. Oracle will win or lose share here based on delivery pace, mutually beneficial token economics (tokenomics), and operational quality, not on marketing.

Applications and Agentic AI Commercialization

Oracle framed AI adoption in enterprise applications as moving past experimentation and toward implementation of enterprise-grade agentic solutions. It touted more than 1,000 AI agents delivered across application suites over the past year and described ongoing additions of AI features inside applications without extra charge in many cases. It introduced two monetization levers: token bundles for additional agentic capacity and outcome-based pricing for specific agent-driven workflows. The company said it began a limited rollout of token bundles and had 33 customers pre-purchase tokens for access to more advanced reasoning models. Outcome-based pricing was positioned as a way to align AI spend to measurable value, including examples like candidate screening and hospitality upsell motions. Packaging and pricing will matter as Oracle tries to convert AI interest into repeatable, governable spend lines.

Multicloud Database Momentum and AI Data Controls

Oracle’s multicloud database traction is becoming a core proof point for its full-stack AI position, especially where customers want to run database services in partner clouds. It reported cloud database revenue growth of 29% in the quarter and stated multicloud revenue growth of 404% year over year, with bookings up 325% year over year. The company connected database innovation to enterprise AI deployment by calling out agent memory features and database-level security controls designed to constrain what users and AI agents can access. It also argued that inferencing against proprietary operational datasets is where AI value compounds, and it positioned Oracle’s stack as a way to accelerate that path. Database modernization and multicloud expansion can become a durable growth vector if Oracle keeps lowering integration friction with partner clouds. The durability test is whether multicloud becomes a standard deployment choice, not a niche option.

Guidance and Final Thoughts

Oracle guided Q1 FY 2027 total revenue growth of 27% to 29% year over year and total cloud revenue growth of 58% to 64% year over year, with non-GAAP diluted earnings per share of $1.72 to $1.76. For FY 2027, Oracle reaffirmed total revenue guidance of $90 billion and raised non-GAAP diluted earnings per share guidance to $8.05. Oracle also guided FY 2027 net cash outlay for capital expenditures of about $70 billion, with the reported capital expenditures figure expected to be $20 billion to $25 billion higher due to prepayments and timing impacts.

Oracle’s results suggest the company is becoming a larger participant in the AI infrastructure buildout cycle than many investors anticipated just a few years ago. The combination of long-duration contracts, high GPU utilization, and rapid multicloud database growth points to a business increasingly benefiting from both infrastructure demand and data-layer relevance. At the same time, the scale of planned capital deployment raises the stakes around execution, as future performance will depend not only on winning contracts but also on bringing capacity online quickly enough to convert a rapidly growing backlog into recognized revenue.

See the full press release on Oracle’s Q4 FY 2026 financial results on the company website.

Declaration of generative AI and AI-assisted technologies in the writing process: This content has been generated with the support of artificial intelligence technologies. Due to the fast pace of content creation and the continuous evolution of data and information, The Futurum Group and its analysts strive to ensure the accuracy and factual integrity of the information presented. However, the opinions and interpretations expressed in this content reflect those of the individual author/analyst. The Futurum Group makes no guarantees regarding the completeness, accuracy, or reliability of any information contained herein. Readers are encouraged to verify facts independently and consult relevant sources for further clarification.
Disclosure: Futurum is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum as a whole.

Other Insights From Futurum:

Oracle Q3 FY 2026 Earnings Driven by OCI AI Infrastructure Demand

Oracle Positions AI Database 26ai to Lead $1.2 Trillion Market by Bridging the Agentic Reasoning Gap

Oracle Bets on Outcome-Driven AI Agents, But Will Enterprises Buy the Vision?

Author Information

Futurum Research
Futurum Research

Futurum Research delivers forward-thinking insights on technology, business, and innovation. Content published under the Futurum Research byline incorporates both human and AI-generated information, always with editorial oversight and review from the expert Futurum Research team to ensure quality, accuracy, and relevance. All content, analysis, and opinion are based on sources and information deemed to be reliable at the time of publication.

The Futurum Group is not liable for any errors, omissions, biases, or inadequacies in the information contained herein or for any interpretations thereof. The reader is solely responsible for any decisions made or actions taken based on the information presented in this publication.

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