Oracle’s OpenAI reliance faces scrutiny as debt-fueled AI buildout raises worries

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Months after Oracle’s $400 billion-plus contract backlog ignited a stock-market frenzy, the enthusiasm has given way to doubts about its reliance on OpenAI and debt-fueled datacenter buildout, which will dominate its earnings on Wednesday.

A smaller player in the cloud market for a long time, Oracle this year staked claim as one of the bigger providers of the rented computing power essential for generative AI thanks to its tie-up with ChatGPT-creator OpenAI.

It is vying with industry giants Amazon.com, Microsoft and Google for a piece of the lucrative market as companies adopt AI and startups developing the technology rush to secure access to capacity.

Oracle along with other big cloud players is expected to spend more than $400 billion on AI infrastructure this year.

Analysts have said a big portion of Oracle’s capital expenditure is tied to OpenAI-related datacenters. That has sparked investor worries as details are scarce on how OpenAI – valued at $500 billion but still unprofitable – plans to fund its spending, which total more than $1 trillion by 2030.

Concerns have also mounted that the AI boom driving up valuations is turning into a bubble amid a lack of real-world adoption for the technology, sparking a selloff in Oracle’s shares and bonds.