Feb 1 (Reuters) – Oracle expects to raise $45 billion to $50 billion in 2026 to build additional capacity for ​its cloud infrastructure, the software company said on Sunday.

The ‌company, chaired by billionaire Larry Ellison, said it plans to achieve its funding ‌objectives using a combination of debt and equity financing.

“Oracle is raising money in order to build additional capacity to meet the contracted demand from our largest Oracle Cloud Infrastructure customers, ⁠including AMD, Meta, NVIDIA, ‌OpenAI, TikTok, xAI and others”, the company said in a statement.

Oracle plans to raise around ‍half of the funding through a combination of equity-linked and common equity issuances, including mandatory convertible preferred securities and a new at-the-market ​equity program of up to $20 billion.

The software group plans to ‌raise the other half of its funding by issuing senior unsecured bonds early in 2026.

Investors have scrutinized Oracle’s AI infrastructure build-out in recent weeks as its debt climbs and its fortunes become increasingly tied to OpenAI, which is not ⁠profitable and has not detailed how ​it would finance its infrastructure plans.

Oracle ​was sued earlier this month by bondholders who say they suffered losses because the company concealed ‍its need to ⁠sell significant additional debt to build out its artificial intelligence infrastructure.

The cost of insuring Oracle’s debt against default ⁠surged in December last year to its highest in at least five ‌years.

(Reporting by Chandni Shah in Bengaluru; editing by ‌Diane Craft and Lincoln Feast)