Software firm Oracle is reportedly in talks with the White House to run TikTok. That's according to a report Sunday (March 16) by Politico, which notes that there's still a roadblock to the deal: concerns about the role TikTok's Chinese founders will play in the video sharing app's future in the U.S.
According to a report from The Information, Oracle (ORCL) is a top candidate for U.S. ownership of TikTok. Solo Ceesay talks about how the deal can impact app users and what it means for "decentralized media.
Some investors might be getting wary of buying new stocks given the news they are seeing these days. The Trump administration's unpredictable tariffs, sticky inflation, and elevated interest rates have been rattling the markets over the past month or so.
President Trump has threatened to slap a 200% tariff on European wine and spirits. It has some questioning if other sectors could eventually get hit with tariffs too, specifically luxury retailers.
ORCL's AI Centre can't hide missed earnings, falling license revenues, and fierce regional competition from AWS, Microsoft and Google.
Zacks.com users have recently been watching Oracle (ORCL) quite a bit. Thus, it is worth knowing the facts that could determine the stock's prospects.
Oracle (ORCL -2.14%) reported quarterly results to stock market investors, who were dissatisfied with the performance.
Oracle Corp is in discussions with Indonesia's government to establish a cloud services center in the country's Batam Island, Bloomberg News reported on Friday, citing people familiar with the matter.
TikTok has until April to finalize a sale to a U.S.-based buyer, yet uncertainties about the future of the short-form video app remain.
Tech billionaire Larry Ellison's Oracle is reportedly a “leading contender to help run TikTok” as the Trump administration works to secure a sale that would avoid a complete ban of the China-owned app.
Explore Oracle's (ORCL) international revenue trends and how these numbers impact Wall Street's forecasts and what's ahead for the stock.
SMCI is poised for growth with new data center capacity and AI initiatives. Oracle's recent q3'25 earnings confirmed strong demand for cloud services with its backlog growing to $130b. Though consensus estimates suggest skepticism across the analyst community, Oracle's guidance may support management's $40b revenue guidance for eFY26. Customers may ramp up the transition to Blackwell GPUs in q3'25 following, pushing SMCI to ramp-up production to meet customer demand following a significant decline in inventory levels.