Back in 2020, Oracle was widely seen as a fading player in the cloud infrastructure spacea mature legacy vendor at risk of losing market share. Fast forward four years, and the narrative has shifted dramatically. Oracle is now experiencing significant growth in cloud infrastructure, shedding its outdated image as a company reliant solely on its database legacy. Over the past three years, its stock has surged ~50%, outpacing many faster-growing cloud competitors. This turnaround is driven by an aggressive pivot to cloud services, evolving from a measured transition to an all-out sprint. Oracle’s transformation bears striking similarities to Amazon’s rise, with cloud services fueling growth while traditional business lines take a back seat. Oracle Cloud, encompassing both SaaS (cloud-based versions of its software) and IaaS (infrastructure competing with AWS and Azure), has emerged as the company’s primary growth engineand I believe the cornerstone of its evolution into an AI powerhouse.
Recently, Oracle made headlines with its $500 billion joint investment in The Stargate Project, an OpenAI-led initiative to develop a massive data center footprint for AI compute needs. However, the AI growth story faced a major test on January 27, 2025, when DeepSeek announced that its latest AI models deliver performance comparable to OpenAI’s ChatGPT. This triggered a broad market sell-off, with Oracle dropping 13.79% as investors questioned the long-term returns of massive compute investments. Despite the short-term turbulence, I believe Oracle’s long-term growth story remains intact.
AI-Powered Growth in OCI: The rise of AI has created a need for powerful cloud computing resources, and Oracle has taken advantage of this opportunity. The amount of GPU usage on OCI increased by 336% in just one quarter, showing how much AI developers rely on Oracle’s infrastructure. OCI stands out because of its ultra-fast networking and automated data centers, which allow AI models to train more quickly and at lower costs compared to many competitors.Oracle recently announced it had built the “largest and fastest AI supercomputer,” featuring up to 65,000 Nvidia G200 GPUs. Partnerships with AI leaders like Meta, OpenAI, and Nvidia show that OCI is becoming a trusted option for handling large-scale AI tasks. These collaborations give Oracle an edge over cloud providers that lack specialized AI capabilities. The big question is whether Oracle can continue growing in this space. AI workloads require massive amounts of computing power and energy, so Oracle must scale efficiently to maintain its advantage. Right now, demand for AI cloud services is growing rapidly, but Oracle will need to keep investing in its data centers and technology to stay ahead. I believe that the Stargate project investing $500 billion is commitment enough that Oracle is able to continue investing and continue growing.