Options data reveals how Oracle stock may respond to its Q4 earnings tomorrow

Options data reveals how Oracle stock may respond to its Q4 earnings tomorrow
Wajeeh Khan
09 Jun 2026, 23:19 PM

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ORCL long

Buy Oracle (ORCL) ahead of earnings. Options skew is bullish (put-to-call 0.46) and the June 12 upside strike near $224 implies >10% upside post-print if guidance holds. Fundamentals show strong momentum: Q3 delivered 20%+ organic growth in both revenue and earnings, and consensus expects another ~20% top-line and ~15% bottom-line jump. Key catalyst is AI infrastructure demand translating into results, with a ~1% dividend as carry.

Key Risk: A credit/financing shock from heavy leverage—deleveraging fears (debt >$124B, negative FCF) trigger a selloff even if EPS beats.

ORCL earnings upside call spread

Buy an ORCL call spread into the print: long the ~at-the-money call and short the next higher strike (use the ~224 area as the upper reference). This targets the market-implied move (options pricing suggests >10% upside) while limiting premium burn if the stock only pops modestly. The bullish put-to-call skew supports call-side demand into June 12.

Key Risk: Earnings/guidance disappoint on AI demand or RPO/FCF trajectory, causing the stock to fall back below the lower strike and the spread to lose value fast.

  • Oracle is set to report its Q4 earnings tomorrow, June 10, after market close.
  • Options traders believe ORCL shares will rip higher after the quarterly print.
  • But there's reason to practice caution in playing Oracle stock at current price.

Oracle ORCL shares remain in focus ahead of the artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure firm’s Q4 earnings set to be released tomorrow, June 10, after market close. 

Consensus is for the company to report $1.96 a share (EPS) of adjusted earnings on $19.1 billion (approx. AED 70.2 billion) in revenue – about a 20% growth on the top-line and 15% on the bottom-line.

Heading into the quarterly print, Oracle stock stands as a major “outperformer”, currently up nearly 50% versus its recent low of about $137.

Where options data suggests Oracle stock is headed

As is evident, the Austin-headquartered firm has already had a meteoric run in recent months, but the derivatives market believes it’s not out of room just yet. 

The put-to-call ratio on contracts expiring June 12 (a day after earnings) sits at 0.46 at the time of writing, signaling a strong bullish skew.

And the upper price on those contracts is set at about $224 currently, indicating ORCL shares could be trading more than 10% above current levels after the quarterly release.

Note that technicals also favour continued momentum ahead; Oracle remains firmly above its key moving averages (MAs), with an RSI in the early 50s suggesting room for further upside before it hits “overbought” levels.

Why ORCL shares are somewhat risky to own

Bulls will point to Oracle's $553 billion (approx. AED 2 trillion) remaining performance obligations (RPO) backlog – but skeptics are watching something far more unsettling: the balance sheet.

The behemoth's long-term debt has pushed above $124 billion (approx. AED 455.5 billion), interest expense has climbed 32% year-over-year, and trailing free cash flow sits at a deeply negative $24.7 billion (approx. AED 90.7 billion).

To fund its $50 billion (approx. AED 183.7 billion) capex program, up from just $12.1 billion (approx. AED 44.4 billion) in the "comparable" nine-month period last year, Oracle announced plans to raise as much as $50 billion (approx. AED 183.7 billion) in February via bonds and convertible preferred stock.

The company has also disclosed $261 billion (approx. AED 958.7 billion) in additional data center lease commitments not yet reflected on the balance sheet.

Naturally, the current ratio has deteriorated sharply, falling to 0.62, meaning short-term liabilities now significantly outpace current assets.

Any meaningful slowdown in AI demand, a slip in the GPU supply chain, or a credit-rating event may, therefore, transform Oracle’s growth narrative into a painful deleveraging story.

What’s the consensus view on Oracle Corp?

Beyond leverage concerns, however, the fundamental momentum is difficult to ignore. Q3 marked the company’s first quarter in over 15 years of simultaneous 20% plus organic growth in both top- and bottom-line.

This is partly why Wall Street firms remain bullish as ever on ORCL stock heading into the results.

Consensus rating on the AI infrastructure firm sits at “strong buy” currently – with the mean price target of $254 indicating potential upside of nearly 25% from here.

Plus, a near 1% dividend yield makes Oracle Corp even more attractive as a long-term holding.