Driven by massive AI infrastructure investments, Oracle's (ORCL) market performance has experienced considerable volatility in 2026. Ahead of its next earnings release, we asked Cognitive Credit AI to provide a detailed investment grade summary of the cloud services giant with a focus on credit implications.
Oracle's equity has experienced significant volatility in calendar year 2026. From an investment-grade credit perspective, the equity market is pricing three tensions that are equally visible in the credit fundamentals:
- Free cash flow has turned sharply and deeply negative. LTM FCF is -$24,736M, a YoY change of -525.6%. For IG bondholders, negative FCF means the company is not self-funding — it is dependent on capital markets to bridge the gap between operating cash generation and investment commitments.
- Gross leverage has risen to 4.86x LTM, up from 3.90x in 4Q25. Gross debt has grown to $134,605M, a 39.8% YoY increase. This pace of leverage expansion is inconsistent with typical BBB-range credit metrics.
- The fixed charge coverage ratio has deteriorated sharply to 0.40x LTM, down from 0.94x in 4Q24 and 0.63x in FY25. This metric — which captures the full burden of lease commitments, interest, and other fixed charges — is the most alarming signal in the dataset. It means Oracle's EBITDA does not cover its total fixed obligations on a trailing basis, a condition that is structurally incompatible with investment-grade status if it persists.
The equity market is discounting the risk that the investment cycle may be longer and more capital-intensive than management projects. Credit investors face the same question with higher stakes: if the cycle extends, can Oracle maintain its IG rating?
This extract is from our investment grade credit review of Oracle.
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