Oracle (ORCL) reported its second quarter 2019 earnings results which surpassed analysts’ estimates. The tech giant reported earnings of $0.80 per share on revenues of $9.6 billion. The consensus forecast Oracle to post earnings of $0.78 per share on revenue of $9.52 billion. Oracle stock rose about 3% during the extended hours of trading.
Total revenue was flat compared to the year-ago quarter. Revenue from Cloud Services and License Support segment grew 3%, while revenue from Cloud License and On-premise License, Hardware and Services declined 9%, 5%, and 5%, respectively.
“In addition to our strong EPS growth, free cash flow grew 10% to $13.8 billion over the
previous twelve months. I am confident that we will continue to record strong EPS and free cash
flow growth during the second half of this fiscal year,” said CEO Safra Catz.
With nearly 6,000 Fusion ERP customers and over 16,000 NetSuite ERP customers, Oracle believes that customers will migrate from their traditional on-premise ERP to the Oracle Fusion ERP
Cloud.
Oracle declared a quarterly cash dividend of $0.19 per share, which will be paid to stockholders of record as of January 16, 2019, with a payment date of January 30, 2019.
Oracle stock falls on weak cloud business; earnings top estimates
Last week, Oracle filed a suit in federal court alleging that the Pentagon’s planned $10 billion JEDI contract with its single-vendor award is unfair and illegal. The single-award approach is contrary to well-established procurement requirements and is out of sync with the industry’s multi-cloud strategy.
For months, Oracle has complained that the contract has been favoring the industry leader, Amazon (AMZN) Web Services. And the JEDI contract process is about determining the cloud strategy for the Department of Defense for the next decade. IBM (IBM) has also filed a similar protest in October, citing many of the same arguments.
Meanwhile, another tech firm Red Hat (RHT) reported mixed results for its third quarter. Earnings of $0.96 per share exceeded analysts’ views, while revenue of $847 million missed Street’s estimates and sent the stock towards the south direction in the after-market hours.
Shares of Oracle ended Monday’s trading session at $45.73, down 1.87%. The stock had given a negative return of 5% in the past 52-weeks period.
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