Will Oracle Be a Trillion-Dollar Stock by 2030?

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Shares of Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) have underperformed the broader market in the past year, rising a modest 25% while the tech-laden Nasdaq-100 Technology Sector index has clocked gains of almost 45%. However, the provider of database and cloud services provider has shot into the limelight of late thanks to artificial intelligence (AI).

Last month, investors cheered Oracle's results from its fiscal 2024 third quarter, which ended Feb. 29. The database specialist not only delivered better-than-expected numbers, but also revealed a solid improvement in its revenue pipeline thanks to the growing demand for its AI solutions. However, will Oracle be able to capitalize on the AI opportunity, beat the broader stock market in the long run, and become a trillion-dollar company by 2030?

AI could accelerate Oracle's growth

In Oracle's fiscal 2018, it reported $39.8 billion in revenue. The company is expected to finish fiscal 2024 in a few months with a total revenue of $53.2 billion. That translates into a six-year compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.6%. For the current fiscal year, Oracle is expecting a 6.6% increase in revenue.

However, Oracle's top-line growth rate is expected to improve over the next couple of years, hitting 10% in its fiscal 2026.

ORCL Revenue Estimates for Current Fiscal Year Chart
ORCL Revenue Estimates for Current Fiscal Year. Data by YCharts.

The growing adoption of cloud-based enterprise AI applications could help accelerate Oracle's growth beyond fiscal 2026. That's because the market for cloud-based AI services is set to grow rapidly from an estimated revenue of $43 billion in 2022 to a forecast $887 billion in 2032, according to researchers at Valuates Reports. The good news for Oracle investors is that this market has started moving the needle in a nice way for the company.

In its fiscal third quarter, Oracle generated $9.96 billion in revenue from its cloud services business -- an increase of 12% from the prior-year period. The segment now accounts for 75% of the company's total revenue compared to 72% in the year-ago quarter. However, this business's growth pace looks poised to accelerate, as Oracle's remaining performance obligations were up an impressive 28% year over year to $80 billion.

Oracle attributed this sharp increase to the "[l]arge new cloud infrastructure contracts" it signed during the quarter for its AI-focused Gen2 cloud infrastructure. It is worth noting that Oracle is witnessing stronger-than-expected demand for its Gen2 AI cloud infrastructure. That rising demand, which is outstripping its capacity, explained CEO Safra Catz in the earnings release, is why the company is "opening new and expanding existing cloud datacenters very, very rapidly."