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That was the promise of Cerner, the medical-records company Oracle bought in 2021 for $28.3 billion — Oracle's biggest acquisition. At the time, Cerner managed the electronic health records for a quarter of all American hospitals, including those run by the Pentagon and the Department of Veterans Affairs. Larry EllisonCerner's electronic records, in short, were a deadly disaster for the VA. Never mind the futuristic, AI-driven healthcare system Ellison envisioned. In 2015, it beat out Epic, its main competitor, for a $4.3 billion contract to handle electronic health records for the Defense Department. It had agreed to process tens of millions of crucial medical records, but it couldn't handle the subsequent deluge of data.
Persons: Larry Ellison's, Ellison, Cerner, I'm, Larry Ellison, Neal Patterson, Cerner's, Patterson, Ellison's, they're, David Shulkin, Margaret Albaugh, Cerner couldn't, Charlie Bourg, , Larry, Marc Benioff, Ellison protégé, Mike Wilson, David Agus, oncologist, Agus, he'd, Steve Jobs, Sensei, We've, Georges De Keerle, Cerner —, hadn't, Mike Sicilia, Sicilia, Oracle, Anthony Jones Jr, Jones, Donald Remy, didn't, Seema Verma, Neil Evans, Sara Vaezy, Ed Meagher, haven't, Charlie Monroe —, it's, Charlie Bourg —, Bourg, Charlie Monroe, Monroe, Cathy McMorris Rodgers, grandkids, We're, there's Organizations: Oracle's, Oracle, Pentagon, Department of Veterans Affairs, Cerner, RAND Corporation, RAND, Big Tech, GE, Siemens, Cerner Corporation, Defense Department, Department of Defense, Business, Spokane, Ellison Institute of Technology, Microsoft, Agency, Health, Amazon, Veterans ' Affairs, Oracle Health, Navy, Columbus VA, BI, Life Sciences, Intermountain Health, UPMC, DOD, Seabees Locations: Las Vegas, antiaging, Silicon Valley, Spokane , Washington, Cerner, VistA, Bourg, Washington, Sicilia, Ohio, Columbus, Providence, Spokane, Monroe, CloudWorld
Oracle — The database software stock surged 11% and headed for its best day since December 2021 after posting fiscal third-quarter earnings that topped Wall Street's expectations. Asana — The stock shed about 11% after the work management platform issued weak full-year revenue guidance. Asana said to expect revenue between $716 million and $722 million, less than the forecast of $725 million estimated by analysts polled by LSEG. American is expecting an adjusted loss of 15 cents to 35 cents per share, versus a 22 cent loss expected from analysts polled by FactSet. On lost 0.05 Swiss franc per share, while analysts polled by StreetAccount expected On to earn 0.10.
Persons: Oracle, William Brown, Asana, Microstrategy, Canaccord, TD Cowen, Dan Loeb's, StreetAccount, Archer, Daniels, Samantha Subin, Lisa Han, Alex Harring, Sarah Min Organizations: Southwest Airlines —, Boeing, Southwest, Oracle, L3Harris Technologies, LSEG, Wall Street, Boeing —, New York Times, Max, Alaska Airlines, Acadia Pharmaceuticals, American Airlines —, FactSet, Management, Advance, Swiss, Revenue, Daniels, Midland, Daniels Midland, . New York Community Bancorp Locations: .
Oracle posted adjusted earnings per share of $1.41, topping the $1.38 consensus estimate of analysts polled by LSEG. Kohl's — Shares added 2.2% after the retailer reporting an earnings and revenue beat for the fourth quarter. Wells Fargo upgraded the stock to overweight, while raising its price target for shares to $16. Meanwhile, Oppenheimer upgraded its rating to outperform and upped its target price to $12 per share. TD Cowen also raised its price target to $1,560 while keeping its outperform rating, noting its quick increase to incremental bitcoin holdings.
Persons: Asana, Raymond James, Bitdeer, Wells Fargo, Oppenheimer, Canaccord, TD Cowen, , Sarah Min, Lisa Kailai Han, Michelle Fox Organizations: Oracle, LSEG, Revenue, Southwest Airlines —, Southwest Airlines, Boeing, Technologies, Wall Street Locations: Southwest
Oracle — Shares added 1.6% ahead of the software giant's fiscal third-quarter earnings report due after the bell. Analysts polled by FactSet are expecting earnings per share of $1.38 and revenue of $13.29 billion. New York Community Bancorp — The regional bank stock dropped 4.8%, extending losses after Friday's more than 6% drop. Moderna — The stock jumped more than 8% in midday trading, putting it on track for its biggest one-day gain since December. Duolingo — Shares rose 3.6% after JPMorgan initiated coverage of the online learning platform with an overweight rating, forecasting "premium" revenue growth that could substantially drive up Duolingo's valuation.
Persons: FactSet, Lam, Coinbase, Microstrategy, Jefferies, Eli Lilly, — CNBC's Michelle Fox, Alex Harring, Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel, Pia Singh Organizations: Oracle, Nvidia, Semiconductor, Lam Research, New York Community Bancorp, Moderna, P Biotech, Xcel Energy, Barclays, JPMorgan, PDD Holdings
Oracle — The database software stock surged about 10% in extended trading after fiscal fourth-quarter results topped analysts' earnings estimates. Vail Resorts — Shares of the ski resort operator fell more than 3% after its latest quarter missed estimates on the top and bottom lines. Vail also cut its full-year guidance amid lower snowfall across Western North American resorts through January. Asana — Shares of the work management platform rose slightly in after-hours trading after fiscal fourth-quarter results topped estimates. A sign is posted in front of the Oracle headquarters in Redwood Shores, California, on March 11, 2024.
Persons: Vail, Asana, Dan Loeb's, Justin Sullivan Organizations: Vail, Advance, Oracle Locations: Redwood Shores , California
The company laid off 10% of its workforce, which had reached nearly 80,000 employees, last year. AdvertisementJust a year after Salesforce laid off nearly 10% of its workforce, the company's head count is beginning to creep back up. "We're investing into our most productive areas — AI and data," CFO Amy Weaver said this week on the company's fourth-quarter earnings call with investors. The company reported a non-GAAP operating margin of 30.5% for the fiscal year, above the 30% threshold that activist investors had pushed for. New hires, Weaver said, are being added to Salesforce in "cost-effective ways," such as hiring people from areas that have "high talent pools and low cost of living."
Persons: Salesforce, Marc Benioff, , Amy Weaver, Weaver, Benioff, Larry Ellison —, Ellen Thomas Organizations: Service, SEC, New, Business, Oracle Locations: New York, San Francisco, Salesforce
An Exxon gas station sign is seen on October 06, 2023 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. The Wall Street firm said the software stock is at an attractive entry point after its recent pullback. Exxon Mobil , Chevron , Occidental Petroleum — Energy stocks popped as oil prices rallied following the Hamas attack on Israel over the weekend. Blue Owl Capital — Shares of the investment company dropped 2.6% after Oppenheimer downgraded Blue Owl Capital to perform from outperform. Lockheed Martin — The aerospace and defense company saw shares rise about 4.5% in premarket trading following the surprise attack on Israel by Palestinian militant group Hamas over the weekend.
Persons: Walt, Nelson Peltz's, Trian's, Trian, Saket Kalia, Oppenheimer, Bristol Myers, Tesla, Lockheed Martin, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Lisa Kailai Han, Fred Imbert, Hakyung Kim, Yun Li, Tanaya Macheel, Pia Singh Organizations: Exxon, Walt Disney —, Street Journal, Management, JPMorgan, Spotify Technology, Barclays, Oracle, ISI, Exxon Mobil, Occidental Petroleum — Energy, Chevron, Occidental, Owl, Mirati Therapeutics, Bristol, Bristol Myers Squibb, China Passenger Car Association, Lockheed, Hamas Locations: Brooklyn, New York City, Chevron, Israel, China, Palestinian
We're buying 75 shares of Oracle (ORCL) at roughly $107.96 each. Following Thursday's trade, Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust will own 650 shares of ORCL, increasing its weighting to 2.54% from 2.26%. That's why we are buying more Oracle — bulking up our position size into the stock's recent weakness. Oracle stock pulled back in September after the company missed on quarterly revenue estimates and provided an outlook that failed to live up to lofty expectations. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, Mary Daly, Daly, Safra Catz, Catz, Jim Cramer, Jim, Spencer Platt Organizations: Oracle, ORCL, San Francisco Fed, Treasury, CNBC, New York Stock Exchange, Getty Locations: Manhattan, New York City
Oracle — Shares dipped more than 12% a day after the software company posted disappointing earnings and revenue guidance for its fiscal second quarter. Oracle's revenue, which came in at $12.45 billion, was weaker than the $12.47 billion forecast by analysts. WestRock — The stock rose 4.8% following news that the paper and packaging company will go through with a merger with Smurfit Kappa. The Wall Street firm said shares may be oversold after the company experienced a temporary outage on its payment processor Square. Elsewhere, Morgan Stanley reiterated its overweight call on Exxon, saying the company was a top pick in its category.
Persons: WestRock, Wolfe, Baird, Goldman Sachs, Corinne Jenkins, Morgan Stanley, Yun Li, Samantha Subin, Hakyung Kim, Lisa Kailai Han, Jesse Pound, Pia Singh, Brian Evans Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, Oracle, LSEG, Smurfit Kappa, Apple —, Casey's, FactSet, Health, P Global, BBB, CVS, Bank of America, Goldman, Food, Drug, Exxon Mobil —, U.S, Texas, Exxon Locations: U.S
Alibaba — Shares lost 1% after outgoing CEO Daniel Zhang unexpectedly quit its cloud business. In June, the company had said Zhang was leaving as chairman and CEO of Alibaba Group to focus on the cloud intelligence unit. Qualcomm — The semiconductor stock jumped 7.4% premarket after saying Monday it will supply Apple with 5G modems for smartphones through 2026. The Wall Street firm said the slide in the Band-Aid maker has created an attractive entry point. The Wall Street firm called software and services revenue the "biggest value driver" for Tesla.
Persons: Alibaba —, Daniel Zhang, Zhang, Tesla, Morgan Stanley, , Smucker, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Michelle Fox Theobald, Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Kif Leswing Organizations: Tenable Holdings, JPMorgan, Alibaba Group, Qualcomm, Apple, Deutsche Bank, Oracle, Hostess Brands, Meta, Wall Street
Oracle — The software stock climbed 2.5% on the back of an upgrade to overweight from equal weight by Barclays. Airbnb — Shares rose 7.2% on the back of S&P Dow Jones Indices' Friday announcement that the stock would join the S&P 500 starting Sept. 18. The S&P 500 is widely tracked by large index funds, which could create buying pressure on Airbnb's stock in the weeks ahead. Warner Bros. said its adjusted full-year expectation assumes the financial effect of the writers and actors strikes will persist through the end of the year. Brady — The manufacturing stock gained 11.4% after the company reported quarterly results.
Persons: Halliburton, Dow Jones, Blackstone, acquirer Thoma, Brady —, Brady, Lennar, — CNBC's Brian Evans, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim Organizations: Occidental Petroleum, Halliburton, EOG, Resources, OPEC, Oracle, Barclays, Blackstone —, Warner Bros, NextGen, Bloomberg, acquirer Thoma Bravo, FactSet Locations: Occidental, Saudi Arabia
Zynex, Coherus BioSciences , Universal Insurance Holdings — Coherus, Zynex and Universal Insurance stock fell on news from S&P 500 Dow Jones indices that the stocks would be moving within small-cap indexes. Coherus is leaving the MidCap 400 for the MidCap 600, while Universal Insurance is leaving the MidCap 600 altogether. American Express — Stock in the credit card giant ticked up 0.5% following an upgrade to outperform from sector perform from RBC earlier Tuesday. The S&P 500 is widely tracked by large index funds, which could create buying pressure on Airbnb's stock in the weeks ahead. Oracle — The software stock added 1.5% in premarket trading following an upgrade to overweight from equal weight by Barclays.
Persons: Dow Jones, Zynex, Airbnb, acquirer Thomas Bravo, , Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Organizations: New York, Coherus BioSciences, Universal Insurance Holdings, Universal Insurance, RBC, Healthcare, Bloomberg, Oracle, Barclays, Brady, Brady Corporation, FactSet, Warner Bros Locations: Airbnb
Best Buy — Best Buy rose about 1.3% after topping Wall Street's fiscal second-quarter expectations on the top and bottom lines. Heico reported revenue of $723 million for the previous quarter, ahead of the $702 million expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv. Nio — Nio's stock lost more than 6% before the bell after the Chinese electric vehicle company reported a wider-than-expected quarterly loss. The company reported $2.21 in adjusted earnings per share, while analysts were looking for $2.02 per share, according to FactSet's StreetAccount. BYD — The Chinese automaker's U.S.-traded shares rose more than 2% Tuesday premarket, a day after it announced a 204.68% jump in net profit for the first half of 2023.
Persons: Safra Catz, PDD, Heico, FactSet's, BYD, CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Tanaya Macheel, Jesse Pound Organizations: Oracle Corporation, New York Stock Exchange, UBS, Oracle, Verizon —, Verizon, Citi, Refinitiv . Revenue, FactSet . Revenue, PDD Holdings —, Refinitiv, Toyota Motor —, Toyota Motor Locations: U.S, Japan
Best Buy — Shares popped nearly 6% after the retailer's fiscal second-quarter earnings beat on both the top and bottom lines. Big Lots — The discount retailer surged 26.7% after its earnings report came in better than analysts expected. Big Lots lost $3.24 per share, on an adjusted basis, less than the $4.11 forecasted by analysts surveyed by FactSet. Bernstein reiterated its outperform rating and said investors should buy the stock after a recent pullback in share prices. Futu Holdings — The Asian wealth management stock popped 10% following a double-upgrade to buy from underperform by Bank of America.
Persons: Heico, Tesla, Morgan Stanley, tailwinds, General Motors, they're, — Catalent, Catalent, Elliott, Ginkgo, Wells, it's, Bernstein, Jefferies, Splunk, Raymond James, , Sarah Min, Samantha Subin, Yun Li, Hakyung Kim, Michelle Fox, Pia Singh, Jesse Pound Organizations: Refintiv, Revenue, FactSet, Marathon, Securities and Exchange Commission, Marathon Digital, Industry, Nvidia, Holdings —, Oracle — Software, Oracle, UBS, Verizon, Citi, General Motors, Google, General, Motors, Elliott Investment Management, Rockwell Automation, Bank of America, Futu Holdings, NextEra Energy Partners Locations: San Francisco , California, underperform
For a long time, as those three companies moved first and established large initial market shares in the cloud, Oracle looked like it was being left behind. But the turning point was when Oracle launched its second-generation cloud infrastructure offering, called Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Generation 2, or OCI Gen 2, in the summer of 2020. In the second quarter of fiscal 2023 (the three months ended November 2022), Total Cloud revenue grew 43%, with 40% growth for Cloud Applications and 53% growth for Cloud Infrastructure. In the third quarter of fiscal 2023 (the three months ended February 2023), Total Cloud revenue accelerated back to 45%, with 42% growth for Cloud Applications and 55% growth for Cloud Infrastructure. Total Cloud revenue growth surged to 54% again, with 45% growth for Cloud Applications and 76% growth for Cloud Infrastructure.
Persons: Jim Cramer's, Jim, it's, Larry Ellison, Oracle, Microsoft —, we're, Jim Cramer, Justin Sullivan Organizations: Oracle, ORCL, Nasdaq, Amazon Web Services, Google, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, AWS, Nvidia, Cloud Infrastructure, Management, Microsoft, Charitable Trust, Club, APPLE, CNBC Locations: China, Redwood Shores , California
A sign is posted in front of Oracle headquarters on December 09, 2021 in Redwood Shores, California. Meanwhile, CEO Safra Catz said she expects adjusted earnings in the fiscal first-quarter of $1.12 to $1.16 per share. Urban Outfitters — Shares rose 3.4% following an upgrade to overweight from equal weight by Morgan Stanley. Apple — Apple declined 0.7% in the premarket after UBS downgraded the stock to neutral from buy late Monday. Home Depot is also slated to hold an investor day at 9 a.m.Ulta Beauty — The beauty stock rose 0.8% after Loop Capital upgraded Ulta Beauty to buy from hold.
Persons: Safra Catz, Refinitiv, Morgan Stanley, Apple —, Bunge, , Brian Evans, Alex Harring, Hakyung Kim, Jesse Pound Organizations: Oracle, , Apple, Apple — Apple, UBS, JPMorgan, Bunge, Target Locations: Redwood Shores , California, Rotterdam, Netherlands
Biogen — Shares of the biotech stock dipped 2.8% after Biogen revamped its board of directors. Oracle — Shares rose 0.2% to an all-time high on the back of a strong earnings report for the fiscal fourth quarter. Oil stocks — Oil shares rose broadly as WTI crude gained following Monday losses. Chinese internet stocks, metals and mining stocks — Shares of Chinese internet companies and metals and mining stocks jumped Tuesday after the People's Bank of China cut a key short-term policy rate in an effort to stimulate a post-Covid recovery. Metals and mining stocks were also boosted by the news, with shares of Freeport-McMoRan and Steel Dynamics rallying 5.3% and 6%, respectively.
Persons: Susan Langer, Biogen, Refinitiv, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, Transocean, JD.com, , Samantha Subin, Sarah Min, Alexander Harring, Jesse Pound, С. Organizations: Biogen, Oracle, Revenue, Cruise Line Holdings, Bank of America, Royal, Urban Outfitters, Devon Energy, , VanEck Oil Services, Halliburton, People's Bank of, CSI China, Metals, Steel Dynamics Locations: China, Gu'an, Royal Caribbean, Devon, Salt Lake City, People's Bank of China, Freeport, McMoRan
The Carnival Miracle cruise ship operated by Carnival Cruise Line is docked at Pier 27 in San Francisco, Sept. 30, 2022. Other cruise stocks also got a boost, with Norwegian Cruise Line gaining about 9% and Royal Caribbean adding 2%. Chinook Therapeutics — Shares soared 58.32% after Novartis announced it has agreed to acquire the biotech firm for up to $3.5 billion. Oracle — Shares of the IT cloud software company gained 5.99% ahead of its quarterly earnings announcement scheduled for after the bell. Wolfe Research upgraded shares to outperform from peer perform in a Sunday note, citing the company's early-mover advantage in the artificial intelligence boom.
Persons: JPMorgan Chase, Thoma Bravo, Morgan Stanley, Wolfe, Alessandro Maselli, Nio, Nomura, Illumina, Francis deSouza, Carl Icahn, KeyCorp, — CNBC's Hakyung Kim, Alex Harring, Samantha Subin, Jesse Pound Organizations: Carnival Cruise, JPMorgan, Bank of America, Cruise Line, Royal, Chinook Therapeutics, Novartis, Nasdaq —, Thoma, Oracle —, Wolfe Research Locations: San Francisco, Royal Caribbean
Nasdaq — The exchange operator's shares dropped 7.7% following the announcement of its deal to buy Adenza, the software firm owned by Thoma Bravo. Illumina — The biotech stock rose 2% in premarket trading after Illumina announced a CEO transition plan on Sunday. Bill.com — Shares shed 4.8% in the premarket after Morgan Stanley downgraded the expense management platform to equal weight from overweight. Oracle — The IT stock added 4.7% in Monday's premarket as investors awaited earnings for the fiscal fourth quarter expected after the bell. The Wall Street firm upgraded shares to overweight, citing continued demand momentum in the cruise industry.
Persons: Thoma Bravo, Illumina, Francis deSouza, Carl Icahn, Nio, Nomura, Morgan Stanley, Bill.com, Wolfe, , Jesse Pound, Samantha Subin, Michelle Fox Organizations: Nasdaq, Thoma, Oracle, Wolfe Research, ISI, Barclays, JPMorgan Locations: Monday's premarket
Nvidia has breezed through the banking turmoil, and is the S&P 500's best performer with a 81% rise year-to-date. The chipmaker has added $87 billion in market value since Silicon Valley Bank was taken over by regulators. "We are at the iPhone moment of AI," CEO Jensen Huang said this week amid the ChatGPT buzz. At about $654 billion, Nvidia is valued almost six times as much as its longtime rival Intel. NVIDIA stock has significantly outperformed the US stock market.
Additionally, the company posted its first year-over-year sales decline. Oracle posted adjusted earnings of $1.22 per share, more than the $1.20 per share expected by analysts polled by Refinitiv. Signature Bank — Shares of Signature, one of the main banks to the cryptocurrency industry, fell 23% amid a selloff in bank stocks led by Silicon Valley Bank, now in its second day. Earlier in the day the bank's shares fell as much as 32% and were briefly halted for volatility. PacWest Bancorp, Western Alliance Bancorp , First Republic Bank — Shares of the regional banks posted major losses during Friday's trading session amid the larger market selloff sparked by Silicon Valley Bank.
The news weighed on the entire banking sector for a second day, with First Republic Bank losing 7.5% in the premarket and crypto focused Signature Bank down 4%. Allbirds — Shares of the footwear retailer plummeted more than 22% after the company failed to post year-over-year quarterly sales growth for the first time in its history. Oracle — The software company dropped 4.9% after revenue for its latest quarter missed analysts' expectations. It also issued weaker-than-expected guidance for its first quarter and full-year revenue, according to Refinitiv. The Wall Street firm said it's confident the online gaming platform will continue to show strong growth in spite of macro pressures.
Oracle — The information technology company dropped 4.9% after beating analysts' expectations on earnings but missing on revenue for its third quarter. But its revenue came in lower, at $12.40 billion compared with the $12.42 billion Wall Street anticipated. Ulta — The beauty retailer slid 2.1% despite beating analysts' expectations for both the top and bottom lines, according to Refinitiv, and issuing upbeat forward guidance. The company beat revenue expectations with $1.1 billion compared with the $1.07 billion anticipated by analysts polled by FactSet. The company's guidance on net income and adjusted EBITDA for the year leading up to July came in under analysts' expectations.
Marc Benioff said he was adopting Oracle's playbook and being mentored by Larry Ellison as he focuses on profitability. But on Wednesday, Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff admitted that he was adopting Oracle's playbook and being tutored on it by Oracle's founder and chairman Larry Ellison. Benioff started his career at Oracle at age 23, and Ellison made him into a star executive by age 26. The drama started when Oracle started working on a product that competed with Salesforce, eventually leading Benioff to kick Ellison off his board. And now Benioff is publicly thanking Ellison and his Oracle playbook as Salesforce fends off no fewer than five activist investors, all pressuring the company to improve profitability.
Oracle executive Don Johnson is abruptly leaving his key post, insiders say. Johnson was at one point named by Larry Ellison as a potential contender for Oracle co-CEO. Don Johnson — the former Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) boss once named by founder and CTO Larry Ellison as a potential contender for co-CEO — abruptly left his latest post, two people familiar with the matter said. Johnson came to Oracle from Amazon Web Services in 2014 and was tapped by Ellison in 2018 to run the company's all-important cloud unit, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure. About a year later, Johnson stepped down from the cloud and AI organization, according to another email viewed by Insider.
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