Dive Brief:
- Oracle will spend $5 billion over the next five years to grow its U.K. cloud footprint, the company said Monday.
- The U.K. buildout tracks with Oracle’s broader cloud infrastructure expansion strategy. The company aims to double its capacity this year and triple it by the middle of next year, CEO Safra Catz said this month during a Q3 2025 earnings call.
- Oracle rapidly extended its cloud reach from 68 to 101 regions in the last year through smaller deployments than other hyperscalers, the company’s Chairman and CTO Larry Ellison said during the earnings call. “We tend to start small and then add capacity as demand arises and that allows us to have higher utilization,” he said.
Dive Insight:
Cloud moved to the forefront of Oracle’s business a year ago, when the company’s infrastructure and software services revenues surpassed licensing support for the first time. The segment has continued to grow, eclipsing the provider’s ERP and database businesses to claim $6.2 billion of Oracle’s $14.1 billion Q3 revenue.
Where there’s cloud, there’s generative AI, too. The two technologies are intrinsically bound in the U.K. investments.
“This $5 billion investment will accelerate our AI ambitions, providing businesses and public services with cutting-edge cloud infrastructure to drive productivity, enhance security, and unlock new opportunities for growth,” Peter Kyle, British Parliament member and U.K. Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, said in the announcement.
“We’re cementing the U.K.’s position at the forefront of the AI revolution,” Kyle added.
The data center investments come on the heels of a recent partnership Oracle cemented to provide four British governmental agencies, including the Home Office, with a shared services platform leveraging Oracle Fusion Cloud Applications Suite to standardize finance, supply chain and HR data.
Deloitte and IBM will be part of the joint implementation team, according to an October announcement.
As vendors rapidly populate ERPs and other enterprise software platforms with autonomous AI agents, Oracle is keeping pace. The provider launched a suite of cloud-based agentic fraud detection tools for financial services last week and added an array of agent capabilities to the NetSuite ERP in February.
“All of our applications are becoming AI agents,” Ellison said.