Bond Market

Oracle to Raise $18 Billion in Second Biggest Bond Sale of Year

Oracle Corp. launched an $18 billion US investment-grade bond sale on Wednesday, the market’s second-biggest of 2025, as the software maker ramps up its spending to meet the needs of the artificial intelligence boom.

Demand peaked at nearly $88 billion, according to a person with knowledge of the matter.

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The technology giant — which has nearly doubled in value this year — is selling the debt in six parts, including a rare 40-year bond, people familiar with the matter said, asking not to be identified discussing private details. That note is set to yield 1.37 percentage point above similarly dated Treasuries, the people said, after initial price discussions called for a yield of roughly 1.65 percentage point over the benchmark.

A floating-rate tranche was dropped during syndication.

The debt raise comes as Oracle begins to fulfill massive cloud infrastructure deals with customers like OpenAI and Meta Platforms Inc., which are boosting the company’s expenses. Over the next several years, it is projected to spend hundreds of billions of dollars to rent and power data centers.

It is also the cloud provider to TikTok in the US, and under a new framework outlined by the White House earlier this week, it would help oversee the development of a new US-only version of the social media giant’s algorithm.

The software company spent years trailing the top three vendors — Amazon.com Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Alphabet Inc.’s Google — in the competitive cloud infrastructure market. Now that it has struck serious cloud deals, it’s on the hook for upfront costs. Oracle’s cash flow flipped negative this year for the first time since 1992. Analysts anticipate the metric will be in free fall over the coming years before returning to positive in 2029.

Representatives for Oracle didn’t respond to a request for comment. Proceeds from its bond sale can be used for capital expenditures, future investments or acquisitions, or for other general corporate purposes, including debt repayment.

WATCH: Caroline Hyde reports on Oracle’s bond sale.Source: Bloomberg
WATCH: Caroline Hyde reports on Oracle’s bond sale.Source: Bloomberg

Oracle had about $95 billion of long-term debt outstanding at the end of August, according to a securities filing. With its debt deal Wednesday, a measure of Oracle’s leverage relative to its earnings may climb, though it should still be able to maintain its high-grade ratings, Bloomberg Intelligence analysts Robert Schiffman and Alex Reid wrote.

“This is not the, ‘If we build it, they will come,’” Schiffman said of Oracle in an interview. “They’ve already come, contracts are in place, the demand is there. Now they just have to put the infrastructure in place. And I think that’s why people are so confident from the credit side, why they’re going to be able to borrow so much money at pretty reasonable rates.”

The company is already the biggest issuer in an index of investment-grade tech companies, and its blockbuster sale Wednesday may be just one of many to come as firms build out their AI infrastructure. The company will need to issue around $65 billion of debt through 2028 to fund its growth, according to estimates from research firm CreditSights. It last sold debt in January.

The cost of insuring Oracle’s debt against default over the next five years jumped to the highest level since May 7 on Wednesday.

Investors are closely watching any changes to Oracle’s financial approach after the company announced earlier this week that longtime Chief Executive Officer Safra Catz would be replaced. “There is uncertainty about whether the strong cost discipline seen under Safra Catz may be disrupted,” wrote Brent Thill, an analyst at Jefferies, on Monday.

Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., Deutsche Bank AG, Goldman Sachs Group Inc., HSBC Holdings Plc, and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are leading the bond deal. Representatives for BofA, Citigroup and Goldman declined to comment while spokespeople for the other banks didn’t immediately return requests seeking comment.

Oracle’s deal adds to a busy month for US high-grade bond sales. After Wednesday, companies will have sold more than $180 billion of debt, the most since February of last year, Bloomberg-compiled data shows. Borrowers are piling into the market to take advantage of falling yields and historically tight risk premiums.

–With assistance from James Crombie, Ying Luthra and Victor Swezey.

(Updates with deal launch.)

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