November inflation data plus earnings reports from Oracle, Toll Brothers, AutoZone, GameStop, Adobe, Broadcom, Costco Wholesale, and RH.
CNBC's Jim Cramer walked investors through next week's Wall Street action, highlighting earnings from Oracle, Broadcom and GameStop, as well as new inflation data. He also mentioned earnings from C3.ai, AutoZone, Adobe and Toll Brothers.
Oracle's (ORCL 2.93%) shares ended the week with a price bump, as the storied database company rose by nearly 3% on Friday. This was on the news that several analysts raised their price targets on the stock in advance of its second quarter of fiscal 2025 earnings release scheduled for next Monday.
The Investment Committee give you their top stocks to watch for the second half.
Oracle (ORCL) will report fiscal second-quarter earnings after the market closes Monday, with analysts watching for a bump in the tech giant's cloud services revenue.
Looking beyond Wall Street's top -and-bottom-line estimate forecasts for Oracle (ORCL), delve into some of its key metrics to gain a deeper insight into the company's potential performance for the quarter ended November 2024.
ORCL's cloud momentum and AI innovations show promise, but investors may want to await clearer visibility on partnership revenue synergies before adding positions.
Super Micro Computer (SMCI -1.60%) and Oracle (ORCL -1.04%) are benefiting from the growing demand for artificial intelligence.
Oracle Corporation ORCL will release its second quarter fiscal year 2025 results after the closing bell on Monday, Dec. 9.
Oracle stock is having its best year since 1999. But its earnings report Monday will test that rally.
Oracle Corp (NYSE:ORCL) stock was last seen trading at $187.25, shrugging off two price-target hikes to $220 from Jefferies and Guggenheim, respectively.
Oracle's stock appears overvalued by about 20%, based on a DCF model and comparisons with 5-year averages and Microsoft, its closest peer. Oracle's economic moat is strong in DBMS, ERP, and Cerner, but weaker in other segments like IaaS and hardware. Oracle's growth is projected to accelerate to ~12% in 2026, driven by CapEx in IaaS Cloud, though sustainability without margin impact is doubtful.