March 10, 2026

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Oracle Q3 earnings are in, and cloud numbers are hard to ignore

Oracle has given Wall Street a turbulent ride over the past six months.

The stock surged 36% after its first-quarter results, only to tumble 12% following the second quarter, even though revenue beat expectations.

Now, with third-quarter results released after Tuesday’s close, Oracle is making its case again.

Early signs suggest the market is listening, with strong cloud growth helping to lift sentiment.

Shares climbed as much as 7% in after-hours trading as investors welcomed the update.

Oracle’s Q3 earnings: The number that matters most

Let’s begin with the headline number: Oracle’s cloud revenue came in at $8.9 billion for Q3 FY2026, a 44% increase year over year.

The figure was just ahead of the analyst consensus of $8.85 billion.

Total revenue rose 22% year over year, a result that signals strong underlying growth momentum rather than merely meeting expectations.

To put the 44% cloud growth number in context, the investors must understand what Oracle is trying to become.

The company was built on database software that companies ran on their own servers.

For the past several years, it has been rebuilding itself as a cloud infrastructure provider, meaning it now rents computing power to businesses over the internet, competing with Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud.

That is a far bigger, far more lucrative market. Cloud revenue now accounts for roughly 52% of Oracle’s total sales, up from approximately 43% just a year ago.

The company’s Remaining Performance Obligations (RPO), contracted future revenue not yet recognized, rose to $553 billion in Q3 FY2026, up from $523 billion in Q2 and sharply higher from a year earlier, highlighting the scale of long-term demand already locked into Oracle’s cloud pipeline.

The debt question has not gone away

Oracle is a strong-growth story with a real complication sitting underneath it.

The company carries substantial long-term debt, and last quarter unsettled investors by lifting its capital spending outlook to about $50 billion to fund AI data centers.

Capital expenditures are upfront investments a company makes to build future capacity. Spending $50 billion is a big bet on a future that has not yet fully arrived.

That announcement, paired with a Q2 revenue beat, still triggered a 12% post-earnings selloff in December.

Investors saw the spending number and questioned whether the returns would justify it.

Q3’s clean beat eases that anxiety somewhat, but it does not erase it.

The scale of Oracle’s debt-fueled buildout remains a genuine risk, and investors must know that a strong quarter is not the same as a clean balance sheet.

Even with a 7% after-hours jump, Oracle’s stock entered earnings near $149, well below its 200-day moving average and roughly 50% off its September peak.

The after-hours move is a start, not a recovery.

The post Oracle Q3 earnings are in, and cloud numbers are hard to ignore appeared first on Invezz