Can Oracle Reach $800 Per Share by 2030? Here’s How It Can Happen

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By Vandita Jadeja Published

Quick Read

  • ORCL trades at just 20x forward earnings despite 93% cloud infrastructure growth and $638B in contracted backlog, signaling deep underpricing.

  • Oracle's $800 bull case by 2030 hinges on a 28% EPS CAGR, but $70B in FY27 capex guidance sent free cash flow negative.

  • Co-CEO Clayton Magouyrk signed $67B in AI infrastructure contracts in one quarter and called the total market opportunity trillions per year.

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

Can Oracle Reach $800 Per Share by 2030? Here’s How It Can Happen

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Oracle (NYSE:ORCL | ORCL Price Prediction) just reported its biggest quarter ever. Q4 FY2026 revenue hit $19.18B, cloud infrastructure ran +93% YoY, and remaining performance obligations exploded to $638 billion.

Yet shares sit at $184.29, down 4.87% YTD and 11.73% over the past year. The market is wrestling with what Oracle has become: a capital-intensive AI infrastructure provider. Can shares reach $800 by 2030? Here is the math.

ORCL price target

What’s Holding Oracle Back Right Now

The post-earnings selloff was about capex. Management guided FY27 net cash capex to $70 billion, with reported capex including $20 billion to $25 billion in prepayments. FY26 free cash flow swung to -$23.69B on $55.66B of capex.

Morningstar trimmed its fair value to $207/share, citing capex pressure on cash flow. A Trefis piece titled “Oracle Is Burning Billions” framed IBM as the more prudent cloud play. Shares are flat over the last month (+1.56%) and trade 46.3% below the 52-week high of $343.01. With a beta of 1.655, every wobble gets amplified.

Wall Street Sees 37% Upside. Our Model Sees a Different Picture.

Wall Street’s consensus target is $252.64, implying roughly 37.1% upside. Of 43 analysts, 6 say strong buy, 30 buy, 6 hold, and 1 sell. Bullish share: 84%. Our 12-month base case is $248.15 with 90% confidence, broadly in line with the Street

ORCL analyst ratings

The disagreement is on the long arc. Our 2030 base case sits at $422.75 (+131.91%), and our bull case lands at $794.07. Analysts are anchored to a 12-month frame and are not pricing what $638 billion of backlog could compound into over four fiscal years.

An infographic titled '[ORACLE] Stock: The Path to $800' against a dark blue background. It displays several key financial metrics in green and red text. In the top section, two boxes show '$422.75 BLAST PREDICTED PRICE (2030)' and '$800 BOLD TARGET (2030)'. Below that, 'FORWARD EPS: $9.30' and 'IMPLIED P/E AT BOLD TARGET: ~86x' are listed. A large green text '+334.1%' is shown as 'UPSIDE % TO BOLD TARGET'. Further down, 'REDDIT SENTIMENT' is shown with a Reddit logo, indicating '64.13 BULLISH' with an upward arrow. At the bottom, two more boxes display '$794.07 BULL CASE PRICE (TRAILING BASED PRICE)' in green and '$262.47 BEAR CASE PRICE (FORWARD P/E BASED PRICE)' in red. The 24/7 WALL ST. logo is in the bottom right corner.
24/7 Wall St.

The Path to $800 Per Share

Reaching $800 from today’s price of $184.29 would require a gain of 334.1%. With forward EPS of $9.30, a price of $800 implies a forward P/E of 86x. Our base case of $422.75 already implies 24x, meaning the bold target requires 62x of additional multiple expansion on today’s forward earnings. The real path is EPS compounding.

CFO Hilary Maxson reconfirmed long-term targets of a +31% revenue CAGR and +28% EPS CAGR through FY2030. Compound $7.63 of FY26 EPS at that rate and the FY30 number lands in the low $20s.

At $800 on that base, the P/E sits in the high 30s, expensive but achievable for a hyperscaler with 97.5% GPU utilization and $67 billion in AI infrastructure contracts signed in a single quarter.

Co-CEO Clayton Magouyrk put it plainly: “Everything we see shows this market size is in the trillions of dollars per year.” The risk: any meaningful AI capex digestion or balance sheet stress event compresses the multiple before earnings catch up.

Where Oracle Trades Today vs Its Earnings Power

At $184.29 against forward EPS of $9.30, Oracle trades at roughly 20x forward earnings. That is cheap for a business growing cloud infrastructure +93% YoY with operating margin of 36.3% and return on equity of 53.4%.

Shares sit 46.3% below the 52-week high and 36.9% above the 52-week low of $134.57. The 10-year return of 438.47% shows what is possible when Oracle’s story shifts. The current multiple bakes in execution risk while underpricing earnings power.

ORCL price scenario

$800 Is a Stretch, But Here’s Why It’s Possible

Reaching $800 by 2030 requires a 334.1% gain from here. It is a stretch.

For it to happen, Oracle must convert its $638 billion RPO into recognized revenue on schedule, hit or exceed the 28% EPS CAGR target through FY2030, and protect operating margins as infrastructure scales. A serious AI capex digestion or a credit event tied to the planned $40 billion debt and equity raise would derail it. We’ve outlined the blueprint for how Oracle could reach $800 in 2030.

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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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