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Going all out to preserve cash flow! Oracle implements "bring your own chip" to the cloud, shifting the high infrastructure costs of AI
Oracle is using a disruptive approach to address the funding pressures of AI infrastructure by passing the most expensive AI chip costs onto some cloud customers. This helps ease cash flow pressures over the coming years while continuing to expand large-scale data centers.
Facing an expected negative free cash flow for the next few years, Oracle disclosed during its earnings call on Tuesday that some cloud service customers will be required to bear the high costs of AI chips or provide their own chips to connect to their data centers.
Co-CEO Clay Magouyrk stated that this move allows Oracle to deliver new orders while avoiding further deterioration of cash flow. After the earnings release, Oracle’s stock rose over 10% in after-hours trading, having already fallen more than half since its peak last September.
This model breaks the traditional business logic of the cloud computing industry. The core reason is that Oracle is building large-scale data centers to serve major clients like OpenAI. The company has been forced to raise hundreds of billions of dollars through stock issuance and large-scale borrowing, while also pushing forward with significant layoffs.
“Bring Your Own Chips”: Disrupting Traditional Cloud Pricing Models
In traditional cloud computing, providers build data centers, fill servers and related hardware, and recover costs over time through multi-year rental fees, turning a profit.
Oracle’s new approach inverts this logic: multiple clients prepay high prices for AI chips or supply their own chips, while Oracle manages the operation of these infrastructures.
In AI data center construction, chips (mainly from NVIDIA) are usually the most expensive single expense. Shifting this cost to clients means Oracle doesn’t need to front large capital expenditures when taking new orders, directly easing cash flow pressures.
Magouyrk described this arrangement during the earnings call as already implemented with multiple clients, not just a pilot.
Cash Flow Under Pressure, Multiple Strategies for Fundraising
Oracle’s current financial pressures have directly led to this strategy. Due to the massive data center buildout, the company expects cash flow to remain negative for the next few years. To address this, Oracle has raised hundreds of billions of dollars through both equity and debt financing.
RBC Capital Markets analyst Rishi Jaluria told Bloomberg TV:
The latest earnings report also provided some support, with increased sales growth improving Wall Street’s outlook on Oracle.
Cost Cutting via Layoffs: AI as a Cost-Reduction and Efficiency Tool
In addition to passing chip costs onto customers, Oracle is also pursuing more traditional cost-cutting measures: large-scale layoffs. According to Bloomberg, Oracle plans to cut thousands of jobs, with the severance expenses this year reaching the highest level in recent years.
Oracle characterized these layoffs in its earnings statement as a restructuring of product development teams, citing advances in AI-assisted programming tools as enabling a reduction in team size.
This explanation is similar to Jack Dorsey’s Block (formerly Square) last month, which also cut about 40% of its staff under a similar rationale. Whether the market will respond with equivalent skepticism remains to be seen.
Implications:: Testing Financial Limits Amid AI Arms Race
Oracle’s move reflects a common dilemma faced by the tech industry in AI infrastructure investment: how to balance large-scale capital expenditure with financial sustainability.
Whether the “bring your own chip” model will be adopted by other cloud providers could become a key variable in this AI arms race.
For investors, the after-hours stock surge partly reflects a reassessment of Oracle’s management’s ability to handle these challenges. However, when cash flow will turn positive remains a critical question hanging over Oracle.