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Oracle Corporation Stock Analysis

NYSE: ORCL | Information Technology | Application Software
Price $230.33 $14.25 (-5.83%)
P/E Ratio 38.0 TTM
52-Week Range
Low $135 High $345
Market Cap $660.13B USD
ROE 60.8% Annual

Market data as of Jun 3, 2026 · Financials as of May 2025

Published Apr 27, 2026 · Updated May 27, 2026

This analysis examines Oracle Corporation (ORCL) through the lens of its financial statements, valuation metrics, and capital allocation.

Top-Line Growth

At $57.40B, Oracle Corporation's FY2025 revenue was 8.4% ahead of the $52.96B posted in FY2024.

Over the past 10 years, revenue has grown at just 4.1% annually — from $38.23B to $57.40B. That barely keeps up with inflation.

Oracle Corporation's $57.40B revenue base puts it in the large-cap bracket among US information technology companies.

It's been 5 years of continuous revenue growth for Oracle Corporation — a pattern worth noting.

Revenue Trend
Year Revenue YoY %
FY2025 $57.40B +8.4%
FY2024 $52.96B +6.0%
FY2023 $49.95B +17.7%
FY2022 $42.44B +4.8%
FY2021 $40.48B +3.6%

See Oracle Corporation's complete revenue history below

Oracle Corporation's Revenue Breakdown

Breaking down Oracle Corporation's FY2025 revenue by product line shows how diversified — or concentrated — the business really is.

Oracle Corporation Business Segment Performance (FY2025)
Segment Revenue % of Total
Cloud and License Business $49.23B 85.8%
Services Business $5.23B 9.1%
Hardware Business $2.94B 5.1%

At 85.8% of total revenue, Cloud and License Business is by far Oracle Corporation's largest segment.

Cloud and License Business grew 10.7% year-over-year to reach 85.8% of total revenue — a segment worth watching.

Geographically, Oracle Corporation's revenue is split across Americas (63%), EMEA (24%), and Asia Pacific (12%).

Oracle Corporation Earnings & Margins

Net income for Oracle Corporation climbed 18.9% to $12.44B in FY2025.

Net margin widened to 21.7% in FY2025 — an improvement from the 19.8% recorded in FY2024.

FY2025 diluted EPS of $4.34 was up from the $3.71 reported in FY2024.

Dive into the bottom-line numbers with interactive charts

Oracle Corporation Shareholder Returns

Shareholders received $1.65 per share in dividends during FY2025, a yield of about 1.00%.

With 10+ consecutive years of dividend payments, Oracle Corporation has a proven track record of returning cash to shareholders.

With a 38.1% payout ratio, there's headroom for future dividend increases.

Annual Dividend Summary
Year DPS Payout Ratio
FY2025 $1.65 38.1%
FY2024 $1.56 41.9%
FY2023 $1.33 43.2%
FY2022 $1.24 51.5%
FY2021 $1.01 22.3%

Share repurchases are a significant part of the capital return story — Oracle Corporation has bought back $137.05B of stock in the last 11 years.

See Oracle Corporation's buyback history alongside shares outstanding below

Financial Health

Oracle Corporation Debt & Equity Overview (FY2025)
Metric Value
Cash & Short-term Investments $11.20B
Total Debt $115.64B
Shareholders' Equity $20.45B
Total Assets $168.36B
Debt-to-Equity Ratio 5.65x
Current Ratio 0.75x
Interest Coverage 4.9x
Free Cash Flow (TTM) -$394.0M

Leverage is a factor: Oracle Corporation's $115.64B in total debt against $20.45B in equity results in a 5.65x D/E ratio — above-average for most sectors.

The current ratio of 0.75x is on the lower side, suggesting Oracle Corporation's short-term liquidity bears watching.

At 4.9x, Oracle Corporation's interest coverage is adequate — operating income covers interest payments with a reasonable buffer.

Oracle Corporation's free cash flow of -$394.0M indicates cash burn, which warrants attention to the funding source.

See the detailed financial health breakdown in the charts

Oracle Corporation employed 162,000 people as of FY2025, about $354.3K in revenue per employee.

See Oracle Corporation's full employee count history and revenue per employee

Is Oracle Corporation Fairly Valued?

The big question for investors: is Oracle Corporation fairly valued at the current price?

Oracle Corporation shares are currently trading at $230.33.

Based on the P/E Ratio model, Oracle Corporation's fair value works out to $13867.1% downside from where it trades today.

We also calculate intrinsic value using the DCF and EPS Growth models. Sign up to see the full breakdown with fair value estimates.

Valuation Models
Model Est. Fair Value vs. Current Price
P/E Ratio $138 67.1% downside to fair value
DCF Upgrade Upgrade
EPS Growth Upgrade Upgrade

What Stands Out

Here's the bottom line on Oracle Corporation (ORCL) based on the latest available financials.

Revenue of $57.40B in FY2025, up 8.4% year-over-year.

Long-term revenue has been compounding at 4.1% annually over 10 years.

The company is profitable, with a net margin of 21.7% and net income of $12.44B.

Returned $6.24B to shareholders in FY2025 through dividends and/or buybacks.

Highly leveraged balance sheet with a D/E ratio of 5.65x.

The P/E Ratio model implies 67.1% downside to fair value. The remaining 2 models are worth cross-checking before drawing a conclusion — sign up to see the full analysis.

The detailed charts and valuation models below provide a deeper look at Oracle Corporation's financial trajectory.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Oracle Corporation's annual revenue?
Oracle Corporation (ORCL) reported annual revenue of $57.40B in FY2025.
Is Oracle Corporation profitable?
Oracle Corporation reported net income of $12.44B in FY2025, with a net margin of 21.7%.
Does Oracle Corporation pay a dividend?
Yes, Oracle Corporation pays a regular dividend to shareholders.
Is Oracle Corporation (ORCL) undervalued right now?
Based on the P/E ratio model, Oracle Corporation appears overvalued — trading at a 24% premium to its estimated fair value of $133.
What sector is Oracle Corporation in?
Oracle Corporation (ORCL) operates in the Information Technology sector, specifically in the Application Software industry.

What does Oracle Corporation do?

Oracle delivers cloud and on-premise software and infrastructure to enterprise customers worldwide. Its cloud application suite spans Fusion ERP, HCM, SCM, advertising, and NetSuite, while its infrastructure business includes Oracle Database, Java, Autonomous Database, and OCI (Oracle Cloud Infrastructure) compute, storage, and networking.

Detailed Charts

Oracle Corporation Performance

2-year trend showing revenue, gross profit, and net profit

FY2024 – FY2025

Oracle Corporation's revenue grew 8.4% to $57.40B and net profit grew 18.9% to $12.44B YoY in FY2025, indicating moderate business momentum.

Understanding Company Performance

Revenue is Oracle Corporation's total income from operations. Gross Profit is revenue minus cost of goods sold — the higher it is relative to revenue, the stronger the company's pricing power. Net Profit is the bottom line after all expenses, taxes, and interest. Consistent growth across all three signals a healthy, expanding business. Compare with peers in the same sector.

Is Oracle Corporation Profitable?

2-year trend showing gross, operating, and net profit margins

FY2024 – FY2025

Oracle Corporation's net profit margin of 21.7% in FY2025 reflects excellent profitability, with operating margin at 30.8% and gross margin at 70.5%.

Understanding Profitability Margins

Gross Profit Margin (GPM) shows what percentage of Oracle Corporation's revenue remains after direct production costs. Operating Profit Margin (OPM) factors in operating expenses like R&D and SG&A. Net Profit Margin (NPM) is the final profitability after all costs including interest and taxes. Stable or improving margins indicate pricing power and cost discipline.

Oracle Corporation Revenue & Earnings Growth

2-year trend showing revenue and diluted EPS

FY2024 – FY2025

Oracle Corporation's revenue grew 8.4% YoY in FY2025, with EPS growing 17.0%, moderate growth.

Understanding Revenue & Earnings Growth

Revenue is Oracle Corporation's total income from operations — the top line. Diluted EPS (Earnings Per Share) is net income divided by all shares that could exist if stock options, RSUs, and convertibles were exercised. Revenue shows how fast the business is growing; EPS shows how much of that growth reaches shareholders after all costs and dilution. Healthy companies tend to grow both in tandem; when revenue grows but EPS shrinks, margins are compressing. Use our stock screener to compare growth profiles across companies.

Oracle Corporation Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR)

Metric 1-Year 5-Year 10-Year
Revenue +8.4% +8.0% +4.1%
Net Income +18.9% +4.2% +2.3%
EPS +17.0% +7.1% +7.0%
Share Price +36.7% +24.7% +21.1%

Oracle Corporation's 10-year revenue CAGR of 4.1% reflects slow growth, with EPS CAGR of 7.0% outpacing revenue, indicating improving profitability. The share price has compounded at 21.1% annually over a comparable period, outpacing fundamentals — suggesting the market is pricing in higher future growth.

Oracle Corporation Quarterly Performance

Quarterly revenue and net income with a weekly share-price overlay

Upgrade to see the full 5 years (20 quarters) of quarterly data.

FY2025 – FY2026

How to Read Quarterly Performance

Quarterly revenue and net income are Oracle Corporation's most recent three-month results. Each bar shows net income nested inside revenue, since profit is the slice of revenue left after all costs; the taller the green portion relative to the blue, the more of each sales dollar reached the bottom line. A bar below zero is a quarterly loss.

For a long-term view, compare each quarter with the same quarter a year earlier (year-over-year), not with the previous quarter — sequential change is mostly seasonality (for many businesses the holiday quarter is always the biggest). Then watch the trend across several years: is year-over-year revenue growth accelerating or fading; is net income growing at least as fast as revenue (expanding vs compressing margins)? One quarter is noise — the multi-quarter trend is the signal.

Oracle Corporation Share Price vs Book Value

Oracle Corporation (ORCL) share price vs book value per share — FY2015 – FY2025

Understanding Share Price vs Book Value

Share Price is what the market pays per share of Oracle Corporation. Book Value per Share (BVPS) is the company's net equity divided by diluted shares — the accounting floor if the company were liquidated today. When price tracks close to book value the market sees the company as a steady asset; when price runs far above book the market is paying up for expected future earnings. For banks, book value is the primary valuation anchor; for most other companies it's one signal among many.

Unlock Valuation Analysis

Get fair value estimates from multiple valuation models and see whether a stock is undervalued or overvalued.

  • Multi-model fair value estimates (P/E, DCF, EPS Growth)
  • Undervalued/overvalued assessment with upside potential
  • Compare fair values across methodologies

Oracle Corporation Free Cash Flow

2-year trend — cash generated after reinvestment

FY2024 – FY2025

Oracle Corporation burned -$394.00M in free cash flow in FY2025, as capital expenditure exceeded operating cash flow — typical of growth-phase companies investing heavily in capacity.

Understanding Free Cash Flow

Free Cash Flow (FCF) is Oracle Corporation's operating cash flow minus capital expenditure — the cash left over after maintaining and growing the business. Unlike net profit, FCF strips out non-cash items (depreciation, stock-based compensation) and includes actual cash spent on assets. Positive FCF means the company can pay dividends, buy back shares, reduce debt, or make acquisitions without raising capital. Consistently negative FCF signals the company is burning cash and may need external funding.

Oracle Corporation Financial Ratios

Balance sheet strength and debt servicing capacity

FY2024 – FY2025

Debt-to-Equity

5.65

▼ from 11.71

Current Ratio

0.75

▲ from 0.72

Interest Coverage

4.9x

▲ from 4.37

Oracle Corporation's a debt-to-equity ratio of 5.65, a current ratio of 0.75, interest coverage of 4.9x in FY2025 suggest elevated leverage that warrants monitoring.

Understanding Financial Health

Debt-to-Equity (D/E) measures how much debt the company carries relative to shareholder equity — lower means less leverage risk. Current Ratio divides current assets by current liabilities — above 1.0 means the company can cover short-term obligations. Interest Coverage is operating income divided by interest expense — higher means the company earns well above its debt payments. Together these three metrics reveal whether a company can weather downturns without financial distress.

Oracle Corporation Shares Outstanding

Diluted share count per fiscal year — labels show year-over-year change

FY2024 – FY2025

Oracle Corporation's diluted shares grew 1.5% YoY in FY2025, reflecting noticeable dilution often tied to SBC at growth-stage companies or capital raises.

Understanding Shares Outstanding

Diluted shares outstanding counts every share of Oracle Corporation that could exist if all stock options, RSUs, and convertibles were exercised. A shrinking count signals buybacks (returning cash to shareholders by reducing the denominator of EPS). A growing count signals dilution — usually from stock-based compensation, secondary offerings, or stock-funded acquisitions. Routine 1–2% growth is typical at large-cap tech companies that pay employees in equity; sustained growth above 5% warrants a look at the cause.

Unlock Full Analysis

Get the complete 10-year financial history with interactive charts and growth analysis.

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