Oracle’s earnings report revealed a massive cloud backlog anchored by a multiyear compute agreement with OpenAI. The article notes that the exact size of the OpenAI-Oracle deal was not stated in the text, though Oracle’s stock jumped 36% in a single day and the company recorded its biggest single-day gain in 26 years. That surge briefly made Larry Ellison the world’s richest person, a result the piece ties back to Oracle’s strategic positioning and earlier acquisitions, including the Sun Microsystems deal.
Engineers and investors at the AI Infra Summit in Silicon Valley described a fast-moving scramble to build the compute, networking, memory and storage needed to support Artificial Intelligence workloads. The story highlights renewed attention on chips and accelerators, with Nvidia and a raft of challengers drawing interest, and mentions device and component announcements from Arm, D-Matrix and SiFive. The article underscores the scale of the task, noting that some data centers consume as much power as all of New York City and that a massive data center buildout will be required for future growth.
Funding activity and IPO momentum continue to support the market. The article lists a series of high-profile funding rounds and startups attracting investment, including Databricks, Mistral, Reflection, Cognition, Replit, Perplexity and Mercor, and reports that OpenAI’s governance and funding arrangements were addressed with a stake transfer whose size was not stated. Quantum startup PsiQuantum is cited as raising a billion-dollar round. On the public markets, recent IPOs include Figure, Klarna and Gemini, with filing activity from Netskope, StubHub, Infleqtion and CoinShares.
The piece also covers corporate moves and industry shifts: Databricks’ AI chief Naveen Rao is exiting to start a new hardware company, Dell and Intel are undergoing executive changes, and acquisitions and security investments continue in the cyber sector. The article closes by pointing to upcoming events, notably CrowdStrike’s Fal.Con, and frames the current moment as one of rapid growth and risk, with some observers drawing dot-com parallels but many arguing the scale and infrastructure needs make this cycle different.