I am watching the doubling of Oracle's Credit Default Swap (CDS) spreads with significant concern, as it clearly signals a palpable rise in perceived risk regarding the company's enormous gamble on the Artificial Intelligence infrastructure buildout. The surge in the cost of insuring Oracle's debt to its highest level in two years—or even three, depending on the data source—is a direct reflection of investor anxiety over the multi-billion-dollar debt Oracle is taking on. This aggressive borrowing spree, with net adjusted debt potentially tripling by 2028, is a high-stakes strategy to challenge giants like Microsoft $Microsoft(MSFT)$
Will Oracle continue to decline? The stock has already fallen steeply from its high of $345 to $198, losing a significant portion of its year-to-date gains despite still being up 20% YTD. This correction is a stark warning that equity investors are paying attention to the credit market's jitters. The fear is rooted in the low profitability and thin margins of Oracle's AI-focused cloud division, which has reportedly struggled to generate cash flow that can comfortably support the massive capital expenditures required for the AI infrastructure. Essentially, the market is pricing in the risk that the reward from this massive AI bet will not materialize fast enough to cover the surging debt load.
The core of the issue, as I see it, is the nature of Oracle's AI strategy compared to its peers. The question of whether the "OpenAI bubble will ultimately be paid for by Oracle" is incredibly pointed. Other major tech companies issuing debt, like Microsoft and Alphabet $Alphabet(GOOGL)$
If investor confidence in the AI market wavers further, I anticipate Oracle's CDS spreads will indeed rise even more steeply, confirming its role as the credit market's barometer for AI risk. A lack of clear evidence that Oracle can quickly improve the thin margins of its cloud unit, convert its order backlog into meaningful profits, and ease its debt-to-equity ratio will keep both credit and equity under severe pressure. The decline from the $345 peak suggests that the market is already recalibrating its expectations, moving away from pure enthusiasm toward a hard assessment of execution risk and financial sustainability.
Ultimately, I believe Oracle's $Oracle(ORCL)$
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