# Oracle is pouring tens of billions into cloud infrastructure for AI workloads globally

> Source: <https://cryptobriefing.com/oracle-expands-cloud-infrastructure-ai-workloads/>
> Published: 2026-06-16 13:09:35+00:00

# Oracle is pouring tens of billions into cloud infrastructure for AI workloads globally

The database giant plans to raise up to $50 billion in 2026 to fund a massive AI infrastructure buildout spanning five countries.

Oracle is betting that the future of its business runs through GPU-packed data centers. The company is aggressively expanding its Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) to meet surging global demand for AI compute, with multi-billion-dollar projects stretching across the US, Japan, Malaysia, Germany, and the Netherlands.

Oracle plans to raise between $45 billion and $50 billion in 2026 through a combination of debt and equity offerings, all earmarked for accelerating this AI-focused buildout.

## The numbers tell the story

In Q4 of fiscal year 2026, OCI revenue surged 93% year over year to $5.8 billion. The broader cloud services revenue grew 47% to $9.91 billion during the same period.

Oracle has managed to land contracts with some of the biggest names driving the AI wave, including OpenAI, Meta, and NVIDIA.

Japan is getting over $8 billion in data center investment. Malaysia is slated for more than $6.5 billion. Germany and the Netherlands are sharing a $3 billion allocation.

In March 2026, Oracle unveiled its next-generation OCI Supercluster, built on NVIDIA’s Vera Rubin platform. Oracle and NVIDIA have been collaborating closely on bringing this technology to market.

In June 2026, Oracle launched its Enterprise AI services in UAE Central, based in Abu Dhabi. That rollout included expanded model support for Alibaba’s Qwen and Google’s Gemma, signaling that Oracle is building a model-agnostic platform rather than tying itself to a single AI ecosystem.

## Why Oracle is making this bet now

Oracle has historically been known as an enterprise database company. But Larry Ellison’s company has spent the last several years repositioning itself, and the revenue trajectory suggests the strategy is working.

The partnership with NVIDIA is particularly significant. NVIDIA’s GPUs are the gold standard for AI training and inference, and having early access to next-generation silicon like the Vera Rubin platform gives Oracle a technical edge in attracting the most demanding AI workloads.

## What this means for investors

Raising $45 billion to $50 billion in debt and equity will dilute existing shareholders and increase Oracle’s leverage. The infrastructure buildout game is essentially a bet that demand will continue accelerating for years, not months.

Contracts with OpenAI, Meta, and NVIDIA represent long-term commitments, not speculative capacity. Oracle has positioned itself as the credible alternative to the Big Three hyperscalers: AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud.

The key metric to watch in the coming quarters is whether Oracle can convert its capital expenditures into sustained revenue growth without margin compression. A 93% growth rate is spectacular, but maintaining anything close to that pace while absorbing $50 billion in new spending will be the real test of whether this bet pays off.

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