4 Takeaways From Oracle's Earnings Call
Here Comes Larry Ellison's Amazon Cloud-Killer · Fortune

For its second quarter ended Nov. 30, database software giant Oracle posted revenue of $9.07 billion, up 1% compared to the year-ago quarter, just missing analyst expectations of $9.14 billion.

Once again, the key metric of new software license sales was off-falling 19% to $1.35 billion compared to last year, and missing analysts’ expectations of $1.44 billion.

But Oracle co-chief executive Safra Catz speaking on the company’s earnings call called out the good nubbin in that otherwise bad news: She expects that software licenses will lose relevance going forward. Which leads to the first major takeaway from Oracle’s Thursday night call:

1: Cloud Will Make Up for Declining Software License Sales Soon

“The increase in revenue from our cloud business is starting to overtake our new software license business decline,” said Catz, who was named to Donald Trump’s presidential transition team earlier in the day. “Our cloud revenue will be larger than our new software license revenue next fiscal year, when the transition will be largely complete.”

Suffice it to say, analysts will be watching closely to see if Oracle can make that deadline. For the second quarter, Oracle’s overall cloud revenue came to $1.1 billion, up 62% compared with the year-earlier quarter.

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Oracle


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, like IBM


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, SAP


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, Microsoft


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and other traditional software providers are all making a tricky transition from selling software that runs on their customers’ premises to software that runs in cloud data centers.

Oracle clearly hopes that its database and business applications customers will choose to run their software on Oracle’s


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cloud infrastructure. The company is building out its own set of shared computing and storage resources, but remains a minor player in the “public cloud” realm, compared to market leader Amazon Web Services (AWS), which logged $3.2 billion in cloud revenue for its most recently reported quarter.

In a research note, BTIG analyst Joel Fishbein, said the “on-premise to cloud transition” has been key focus, “but signs are finally emerging that we’re at a material inflection point.”

2: The Race to $10 Billion Will Be Tight

Oracle co-founder and chief technology officer Larry Ellison has vowed to beat rival/friend Marc Benioff’s Salesforce.com in the race to be the first software-as-a-service provider to hit $10 billion in annual sales. Software as a service, or SaaS, refers to applications delivered via the Internet.

“Our cloud applications goal is to be the world’s largest and most profitable SaaS company. We are growing our cloud business much faster than Salesforce.com, and we can beat them to the $10 billion mark, but it’s going to be close,” Ellison told analysts on the call.