Oracle stock tank after reported delays to OpenAI data-center expansion
Oracle stock ORCL plunged 5% on Friday after Bloomberg reported that the cloud giant has pushed back the completion of several data centers being built for OpenAI from 2027 to 2028.
The delay ignited fresh investor anxiety about Oracle’s $300 billion bet on AI infrastructure and its ability to convert aggressive capex spending into near-term revenue.
It also dealt another blow to the stock, which had already stumbled after disappointing earnings the previous day.
Though Oracle swiftly denied the report, insisting “all milestones remain on schedule,” the damage to sentiment had already hardened, with sector contagion spreading to chip suppliers including Nvidia, AMD, Micron, and Arm.
The Bloomberg report attributed the year-long delay to bottlenecks in labor and power availability, as well as shortages in construction materials, constraints affecting the broader data-center buildout industry.
However, these challenges carry outsized significance for Oracle, which is betting its AI future on the rapid deployment of new facilities.
The Abilene, Texas facility, Oracle’s flagship OpenAI project, has reportedly received over 10,000 Nvidia chips and remains on track, but unnamed sources suggested other locations were being pushed back.
Oracle’s response came swiftly. A company representative stated:
We have no delays at sites required to meet our contractual obligations, and all milestones remain on schedule.
The firm emphasized that “site selection and delivery timelines were established in close collaboration with OpenAI,” and Chief Executive Officer Safra Catz reiterated during the earnings call that targets were “ambitious yet attainable”.
Why market believe the bad news over the denial
The delay report hit at precisely the wrong moment.
Oracle had already spooked investors on Wednesday with Q2 earnings that missed revenue estimates and shocked the market by raising fiscal 2026 capex guidance to $50 billion from the prior $35 billion forecast, a $15 billion increase.
That sudden spending hike, combined with mounting concerns about Oracle’s debt load and return-on-investment timeline, primed the market for negative headlines.
The timing also mattered.
Oracle’s credit default swaps had spiked to their highest levels since March 2009, signaling anxiety among bond investors about the company’s ability to service debt while funding a multi-hundred-billion-dollar build-out.
When Bloomberg’s reporting suggested even flagship data centers faced slippage, investors interpreted it as proof that execution risk was real.
Sector-wide ripples and what comes next
The sell-off rippled across semiconductor stocks. Nvidia fell 3 to 6%, AMD dropped 3%, and Broadcom slid further after its own margin warning.
The contagion underscored how tightly linked the AI boom is to a handful of large customers, and how fragile investor confidence has become about hyperscaler capex cycles.
For Oracle, the road forward hinges on proof of execution.
Watch for any formal SEC filings clarifying capex guidance, quarterly updates on data-center deployment timelines, and OpenAI commentary confirming or denying the delays.
Until then, expect continued volatility around Oracle stock and elevated skepticism toward any AI infrastructure player betting big on near-term revenue conversion from massive capex outlays.