This Scorching Hot Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Just Exploded Higher and Could Be Headed to the $1 Trillion Club Much Earlier Than Expected
AI Stock Rockets Toward Trillion-Dollar Valuation
Another day, another AI moonshot—this one's actually got the numbers to back it up.
The $1 Trillion Sprint
Forget gradual climbs. This stock isn't walking to the trillion-dollar club—it's sprinting. Recent explosive gains suggest Wall Street's favorite new toy might just arrive at the party years ahead of schedule. Typical finance folks are probably already drafting 'I told you so' memos.
AI Fueling the Fire
Artificial intelligence isn't just a buzzword here—it's the engine. The tech's pushing boundaries, cutting through traditional market noise, and frankly, making legacy sectors look like they're stuck in dial-up mode.
Timeline Crushed
'Much earlier than expected' might be the understatement of the quarter. Whatever projections analysts had? Toss 'em. This trajectory laughs at timelines.
Early investors are popping champagne. Everyone else? Just another reminder that in tech, yesterday's 'too expensive' is tomorrow's 'should've bought.'
Image source: Getty Images.
A trusted partner
Oracle holds a coveted place in the technology community, as roughly 98% of Global Fortune 500 companies make up its customer rolls. The industry stalwart provides its customers with a strategic combination of cloud, database, and enterprise software. Naturally, when the shift to AI began in earnest, this captive audience began to turn to Oracle for its expanding collection of cloud and AI solutions.
The company's growth has been uneven, but the future looks bright. During Oracle's fiscal 2026 first quarter (ended Aug. 31), total revenue grew 11% year over year to $14.9 billion, while its adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $1.47 grew by 6%. Both numbers accelerated compared to Q4, but missed Wall Street's consensus estimates, which called for revenue of $15 billion and adjusted EPS of $1.48.
However, that wasn't the headline. Last quarter, CEO Safra Catz noted that the company had reached a "tipping point," noting that revenue growth was accelerating, "and it's only going up from here."
That turned out to be an understatement. Oracle reported explosive growth in its remaining performance obligation (RPO) -- or contractual obligations not yet included in revenue -- which skyrocketed 359% year over year to $455 billion, up from $138 billion in Q4.
Catz explained, "We signed four multibillion-dollar contracts with three different customers in Q1," calling the results "astonishing." He went on to say that demand for Oracle Cloud "continues to build." The company expects to sign "several additional multi-billion-dollar customers and RPO is likely to exceed half a trillion dollars."
Looking to the future, Oracle is forecasting Oracle Cloud Infrastructure revenue to grow 77% to $18 billion this year -- but that's just the beginning:
- Fiscal 2027 cloud revenue of $32 billion, up 78%.
- Fiscal 2028 cloud revenue of $73 billion, up 128%.
- Fiscal 2029 cloud revenue of $144 billion, up 97%.
Mind you, this is just Oracle Cloud Infrastructure revenue, and Catz noted that "most of the revenue in this five-year forecast isin our reported RPO." That means that any future contracts will probably increase those growth targets.
The path to $1 trillion just got much shorter
Oracle is leveraging its position as a trusted partner to help customers choose suitable AI and cloud solutions and profit from the growing adoption of generative AI.
Before today's results, Wall Street was expecting Oracle to generate revenue of $66.75 billion in its fiscal 2026 (which began June 1), giving it a forward price-to-sales (P/S) ratio of about 10. Assuming its P/S remained constant, Oracle needed to generate revenue of approximately $98 billion annually to support a $1 trillion market cap. Given those figures, Oracle could have achieved a $1 trillion market cap before 2028.
Wall Street hasn't yet had time to update its models, but given the magnitude of the company's results, previous forecasts are out the window. Barring unforeseen circumstances, I predict Oracle will join the $1 trillion club within the next 12 months.
Estimates regarding the market potential of generative AI continue to ratchet higher. Big Four accounting firm Price Waterhouse Coopers (PwC) calculates the opportunity could be worth as much as $15.7 trillion annually by 2030, which illustrates the magnitude of the opportunity.
Given the recent contract wins, Oracle has proven that it is leveraging its experience to profit from this windfall. The writing is on the wall, and Oracle is poised to join the fraternity of trillionaires in short order.