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Total Revenue: $15.9 billion, up 11% from last year.
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Non-GAAP EPS: $1.70.
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GAAP EPS: $1.19.
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Total Cloud Revenue (SaaS + IaaS): $6.7 billion, up 27%.
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Total Cloud Services and License Support Revenue: $11.7 billion, up 14%.
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IaaS Revenue: $3 billion, up 52%.
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OCI Consumption Revenue: Up 62%.
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Cloud Database Services Revenue: Up 31%, annualized revenue of $2.6 billion.
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Autonomous Database Consumption Revenue: Up 47%.
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SaaS Revenue: $3.7 billion, up 11%.
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Application Subscription Revenues: $5 billion, up 8%.
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Software License Revenues: $2 billion, up 8%.
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Operating Income Growth: 7%.
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Full Fiscal Year Revenue: $57.4 billion, up 9%.
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Total Cloud Services and License Support Revenue (Full Year): $44 billion, up 12%.
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Operating Cash Flow (Full Year): $20.8 billion, up 12%.
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Free Cash Flow (Full Year): Negative $400 million.
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CapEx (Full Year): $21.2 billion.
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Cash and Marketable Securities: $11.2 billion.
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Short-term Deferred Revenue Balance: $9.4 billion.
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Shares Repurchased: Over 1 million shares for $150 million.
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Dividends Paid (Last 12 Months): $4.7 billion.
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Quarterly Dividend Declared: $0.50 per share.
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Remaining Performance Obligations (RPO): $138 billion, up 41%.
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Cloud RPO Growth: 56%.
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Operating Cash Flow (Q4): $6.2 billion.
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Free Cash Flow (Q4): Negative $2.9 billion.
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CapEx (Q4): $9.1 billion.
Release Date: June 11, 2025
For the complete transcript of the earnings call, please refer to the full earnings call transcript.
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Oracle Corp (NYSE:ORCL) reported double-digit revenue growth in Q4, with total revenue and EPS exceeding guidance.
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The company’s cloud transition has reached a tipping point, with cloud revenue (SaaS plus IaaS) up 27% to $6.7 billion.
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Oracle’s infrastructure business, OCI, is experiencing exceptional demand, with revenue expected to grow over 70% in the current year.
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The company’s strategic SaaS products are seeing strong bookings and higher renewal rates, contributing to accelerated growth.
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Oracle’s remaining performance obligations increased to $138 billion, up 41% from last year, indicating strong future revenue potential.
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Oracle’s free cash flow was negative $400 million for the fiscal year, with significant CapEx investments impacting cash flow.
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The company is facing supply constraints, unable to meet the high demand for its cloud services, leading to scheduling customers into the future.
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CapEx is expected to increase further to over $25 billion in FY26, which may strain financial resources.
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Despite strong growth, there is a lack of understanding among investors about the durability and profitability of Oracle’s AI business.
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Oracle’s cloud database migration from on-premise is still in progress, with a significant portion of the database business yet to transition to the cloud.