Oracle vs. Salesforce: Which Tech Giant Is The Better Buy?

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By Vandita Jadeja Published

Quick Read

  • Salesforce's Agentforce ARR surged 205% to $1.2B while Oracle's cloud infrastructure jumped 93%, yet Salesforce trades at a cheaper 12x forward P/E.

  • Oracle plans to raise ~$40B in FY27 to expand across 211 global cloud regions, making it a high-conviction bet on AI infrastructure demand.

  • Salesforce's 38% drawdown leaves it at 12x forward P/E, an unusual discount for a software leader generating $6.5B in free cash flow.

  • Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Salesforce didn't make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.

Oracle vs. Salesforce: Which Tech Giant Is The Better Buy?

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Salesforce (NYSE: CRM | CRM Price Prediction) and Oracle (NYSE: ORCL) both delivered fresh earnings inside a three week window, and the contrast is striking.

Salesforce sells AI agents that sit on top of customer data. Oracle sells the cloud plumbing those agents increasingly run on. Both are leaning into generative AI, but the way each one funds, prices, and books that growth tells two very different stories about where enterprise software dollars are flowing.

Agentforce Carries Salesforce. Cloud Infrastructure Carries Oracle.

Salesforce posted Q1 FY27 revenue of $11.133 billion, up 13.27%, with EPS of $3.88 against a $3.1271 estimate. The real headline is Agentforce ARR at $1.2 billion, up 205%, with 3.8 billion Agentic Work Units delivered.

CEO Marc Benioff called it “an outstanding quarter for Salesforce, record revenue, record deals, and cash flow.” Over 50% of Agentforce bookings came from existing customers, which is reassuring but also raises a fair question about new logo velocity.

CRM earnings explorer

Oracle’s Q4 FY26 told a wilder story. Revenue hit $19.184 billion with cloud infrastructure surging 93% to $5.787 billion. Remaining performance obligations exploded to $638 billion, up 363%, with $75 billion tied to prepaid or customer supplied GPU arrangements.

That cushions Oracle’s capital risk, but capex still ran to $55.663 billion on a trailing basis, dragging free cash flow to negative $23.686 billion.

ORCL earnings explorer

Capital Light vs. Capital Heavy

Lens Salesforce Oracle
Core Bet Agentic CRM on top of Customer 360 Hyperscale AI datacenters and OCI
FY27 Revenue Guide $45.9B to $46.2B $90B
Free Cash Flow $6.556B positive -$23.686B
Forward P/E 12x 23x

Salesforce funded a $25 billion accelerated share repurchase by issuing debt, taking noncurrent debt to $39.3 billion from $10.4 billion.

Oracle plans to raise roughly $40 billion in FY27 through debt and equity to keep building. Co-CEO Clay Magouyrk framed the strategy plainly, saying Oracle has “over 211 live and planned regions worldwide, more than any of our cloud competitors.”

The Next Test Is Whether AI Bookings Convert to Cash

I want to see Agentforce monetization broaden beyond the installed base, and I will be watching whether Slack MCP, which crossed 1 million active users in six weeks, becomes a paid hook.

For Oracle, the question is how quickly that $638 billion RPO turns into recognized revenue without further blowing out capex. The Q1 FY27 cloud growth guide of 58% to 64% is the proof point.

Sentiment is telling, too. Reddit chatter on Oracle stayed bullish post-earnings, with sentiment scores 67 to 78. Salesforce drew the opposite reaction, with scores collapsing to 12 to 33 by June 11.

Why I Lean Toward Salesforce on Valuation, but Respect Oracle’s Backlog

Personally, I find the setup awkward for both. Salesforce trades near a 12x forward P/E with a 38.64% year to date drawdown, which is unusual for a profitable software leader. For value-oriented investors who trust the Agentforce ramp, that valuation stands out.

Oracle is the bolder bet. The 450.97% ten year return and that backlog suggest real demand, but the FY27 capital raise and negative free cash flow mean you are underwriting Larry Ellison’s AI thesis with a heavier balance sheet.

On valuation alone, Salesforce screens cheaper, while Oracle’s backlog underwrites the growth case; one clean quarter of free cash flow improvement at Oracle would meaningfully de-risk the thesis.

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About the Author Vandita Jadeja →

Vandita Jadeja is a financial copywriter who loves to read and write about stocks. She believes in buying and holding for long term gains. Her knowledge of words and numbers helps her write clear stock analysis. She has contributed to several publications, including the Joy Wallet, Benzinga, The Motley Fool and InvestorPlace.

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