We recently compiled a list of the Top 12 Trending AI Stocks on Latest News and Ratings. In this article, we are going to take a look at where Oracle Corporation (NYSE:ORCL) stands against the other trending AI stocks.
Shares of Nvidia, Microsoft, Oracle, and other AI-related companies surged Wednesday after the Trump administration’s announcement of a $500 billion joint venture spurred optimism about a rising tide of AI investments.
Catch up on the top artificial intelligence news and commentary by Wall Street analysts on publicly traded companies in the space with this
Microsoft on Tuesday said it has changed some key terms of a deal with OpenAI after the ChatGPT creator announced a joint venture with Oracle and Japan's SoftBank Group to build up to $500 billion of new AI data centers in the United States.
Oracle's stock surges 8.51% after Trump announces $500B AI initiative, solidifying its role as a key AI provider. CEO Ellison's stake also rises.
Microsoft’s (MSFT) absence from OpenAI’s Stargate announcement follows months of tension between the two companies and signals an era where the
Oracle stock took off as President Trump announced the Stargate AI infrastructure project. Read why I maintain my buy rating for ORCL stock.
The effort was described as a $500 billion investment in artificial intelligence. Read how a small Texas city with a population of about 130,000 fits into the plans.
Oracle Corp. has charged out of the gate in 2025, after its best year in a quarter-century. A plan unveiled with President Donald Trump has intensified hopes that its cloud business will see a tailwind from artificial intelligence.
Tesla (TSLA) and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said OpenAI, Oracle (ORCL) and Softbank (SFTBY) “don’t actually have the money” to back up their pledge
The Stargate joint venture, led by SoftBank Group Corp. (TYO: 9984 ), OpenAI, Oracle, and Microsoft, with technology partners including NVIDIA Corporation (NASDAQ: NVDA) and Arm Holdings ADR (NASDAQ: ARM ), marks a major step in AI infrastructure development, analysts said