
Oracle and OpenAI have struck a five-year, $300 billion agreement that would put Oracle in charge of delivering the compute capacity OpenAI needs to train and run its next wave of AI models. First reported by The Wall Street Journal, the deal is audacious in scope and risk—and could be transformative if it works.
The stakes are high on both sides. The pact assumes that today’s extraordinary demand for AI processing power will continue through 2030. If the market cools, or if more efficient, lower-cost models like those from China’s DeepSeek gain traction, the need for massive compute could ease, undermining the bet.
Some analysts see bubble dynamics. Tracy Woo of Forrester called the deal “aspirational” and “a little ridiculous,” framing it as evidence of an AI boom and part of OpenAI’s effort to diversify beyond Microsoft, its longtime backer.
For Oracle, the agreement signals its bid to join the top tier of hyperscale cloud providers. Long known for databases and enterprise applications, the company has been investing heavily in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure and building out data center capacity. Its 2010 purchase of Sun Microsystems helped establish the Exadata hardware-software platform that could underpin Oracle’s AI compute buildout. The company has also taken a prominent role in Stargate, a proposed $500 billion multi-party data center project involving OpenAI, SoftBank and others.
For OpenAI, the prize is enterprise adoption at scale and a path to profitability. Despite an unmatched consumer footprint—around 630 million people use ChatGPT, most on the free tier—the company is still losing money, with estimated losses of $5.4 billion in 2024 and a potential additional $16 billion by 2026. Winning enterprises remain a challenge for OpenAI and rivals such as Google, Anthropic and Mistral.
OpenAI’s finances got a potential lift when Nvidia said it would invest $100 billion in the company in the form of compute resources—described as 10,000 gigawatts of capacity—to train and run future models. If finalized, and with workloads slated to run on Oracle’s infrastructure, that would cover roughly a third of the Oracle deal’s value.
“OpenAI just has this voracious appetite for more compute,” said Anshel Sag of Moor Insights & Strategy. He argued the near-term challenge is cash flow and GPU availability, not demand. Nvidia’s pledge matters, he said, because “the company that’s committed to you is the company that makes those GPUs.” While Sag questioned the precision of the $300 billion figure given the uncertainty beyond a year or two, he said sustained growth could make the target achievable.
Environmental and community impacts loom over the buildout. The mega-scale data centers required for generative AI are drawing scrutiny for heavy energy and water use, particularly in the U.S. and the Middle East, where new sites are planned. Even so, some observers believe Oracle is positioned to scale.
Michael Ni of Constellation Research, a former Oracle executive, said the company has mitigated some risk by phasing investment and could keep pace with AWS, Microsoft and Google. He suggested the contract terms may be back‑weighted, making early years less onerous if OpenAI’s revenue—estimated around $12 billion annually—doubles year over year as the company expects.
Whether the partnership thrives will hinge on three variables:
If the boom fades or costs fall faster than expected, the deal could underperform. If demand holds and OpenAI monetizes effectively, Oracle could vault into the top rank of AI infrastructure providers, and OpenAI could secure the scale it needs.
Oracle and OpenAI declined to comment.