Monday, September 16, 2024

Oracle gains as cloud infrastructure business gets AI boost

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(ROracle shares jumped nine percent as investors cheered a boom in demand for the company’s relatively low-cost cloud infrastructure services from artificial intelligence applications.




If the gains hold, the company will add about US$30 billion to its market valuation of US$340 billion as of Tuesday market close. The shares have so far this year gained 18 percent.

Oracle has been ramping up its cloud infrastructure unit, which is expected to drive growth by renting out cloud computing and storage to companies, but will face competition from Google, Microsoft and Amazon.com.

Oracle’s cloud infrastructure, pitched as a less-expensive option to its rivals, has attracted business from venture capital-funded generative AI startups, including Elon Musk’s xAI.

Oracle said this week it had tied-up with ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and Google Cloud to extend its own cloud infrastructure to customers.

“The announcement that OpenAI will now be using OCI (Oracle Cloud Infrastructure) only adds to Oracle’s credibility as an AI platform and the new relationship with Google also broadens the company’s distribution for its database,” Evercore analyst Kirk Materne wrote in a note.

The partnership enables OpenAI to use Microsoft’s Azure platform on Oracle’s infrastructure for some use-cases, while its new language learning models are being trained on a supercomputer built with Microsoft, the ChatGPT-maker said.

Oracle’s stock was trading 19.59 times to its forward earnings estimates, lower than that of Amazon.com’s 36.35, Microsoft’s 32.60 and Alphabet’s 21.85.

The company’s fourth-quarter results missed estimates, however, as its legacy database and enterprise resource planning software business faces competition from less-expensive options, as more small- and medium-sized businesses digitise their operations.

“We suspect there is ample churn off of Oracle software to competing database and ERP software firms due to the eroding switching cost argument amid massive digital transformations,” Morningstar analyst Julie Sharma said.

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