
Platformonomics TGIF is a weekly roll-up of links, comments on those links, and perhaps a little too much tugging on my favorite threads.
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Oracle “Beats”: Q3 FY26
Oracle “beat” the number this quarter and Wall Street sent the stock upwards almost 10%. But that price is still well below where it was before the database vampire’s $300 billion OpenAI “RPO” announcement.
Oracle is exhibiting financial disstress across many dimensions: layoffs, massive amounts of new debt, Larry having to dillute himself by selling equity, negative and plunging free cash flow, elevated CDS spreads, talk of divestitures, margin being gifted away, funding partners facing their own financial stress, capital needs for Tik Tok and Bronny‘s Warner Brothers bid, et al. Oracle is Company Hail Mary and the ball is in the air.
My favorite indicator is how efficiently they’re turning CAPEX into revenue (because of course everything comes back to CAPEX). The trends are not good:

Oracle is getting less and less efficient over time. Just to put a very rough number together for Oracle’s Remaining CAPEX Obligation, $500 billion in RPO at $3 per revenue dollar is $1.5 trillion in CAPEX.
And the comp with AWS is even worse (and completely belies the company’s claim to be “asset pretty light” relative to other clouds):

Oracle is spending $3.18 in CAPEX for a dollar of revenue, versus AWS which is spending $0.75 for that dollar of revenue (and Amazon is also in the midst of a massive—some have called it Stalinist—infrastructure build-out of its own).
Some do this analysis in more esoteric financial terms (big acronyms like WACC and ROICC) and also don’t come away impressed with the trajectory. Jim Chanos’ math is here.
Oracle’s CAPEX guidance for the quarter managed to be both muddled and non-existent. They mostly said wait until next quarter for guidance but hinted at a new magical way to have other people pay for their CAPEX. Unclear if the $50 billion reference here was CAPEX guidance, as some reported, or new financing:
So on CapEx, I think we will get back to everyone after the end of the fiscal year and talk about next year’s CapEx at that point in time. But I will state a couple of things. Obviously, from what Clay has gone through, the most interesting thing that you should start thinking about is the uncoupling of CapEx with capital requirements from Oracle Corporation. Obviously, when we have these additional funding mechanisms, there may be additional CapEx, but it does not require out-of-pocket cash from Oracle Corporation, which is quite interesting.
Underlying that is we remain committed to what we talked about last quarter, which is maintaining the investment-grade rating at Oracle Corporation as well as staying within the financing envelope that we talked about, of which we have announced that we are doing $50 billion this calendar year of that total. So more to come, John, on the CapEx after next quarter.
Previous:
They Don’t Have the Money: Oracle Update, Oracle; they’re taking the dilution, Oracle wants you to know things you weren’t wondering about until they mentioned it, Remaining CAPEX Obligation: Divestiture Edition, Allocating Oracle’s Capital, They Don’t Have the Money: Who Could Possibly Have Guessed?, Oracle Disappoints: Q2 FY26, Oracle’s Remaining CAPEX Obligation: Q2 FY26, Oracle Still Can’t Build Data Centers: Q2 FY26, Oracle: Not Even a REIT?, They Still Don’t Have the Margins: Oracle Edition, They Don’t Have the Margins, They Don’t Have the Money, They Don’t Have the Money: Oracle and Tik Tok, Why Can’t Oracle Afford Data Centers?, Follow the CAPEX 2025 Retrospective

Oracle isn’t the only company trying to stage a big comeback from way behind…
Missionaries over (meta)mercenaries?
Grok: the Cybertruck of AI?
Another big progressive win!
Although Howard should have moved to Oklahoma City.
Don’t be Cleveland: Seahawks Edition

We have to look to a sports columnist at the Seattle Times for the local newsletter’s deepest analysis of Washington State’s new state taxes.
Next line of questioning: what it means for who might buy the team and Seattle’s prospects to get an NBA team back.
“We are getting out ahead of the problem because the practice of requiring these chips is too dangerous to wait for it to show up in Washington,” Reps. Brianna Thomas (D-34) previously told GeekWire. “An employee with a microchip stops being an employee — they are essentially being dehumanized into corporate equipment.”
Beyond the legislators themselves, is this really a problem?
Private Equity in Action: Come for the Subpar Returns, Stay for the Illiquidity v2
By the numbers: Median returns for global private equity, which includes both buyouts and growth equity, came in below the S&P 500 for the 1-, 3-, 5-, 10-, and 15-year periods — all through Sept. 30, 2025.
Zoom in: Distributions have remained tough to come by, with the global PE number below par for every global vintage beginning in 2018.
To find a 2x DPI, you need to go back to the 2001-2003 vintages.
Previous:
Private Equity in Action: Come for the Subpar Returns, Stay for the Illiquidity, Private Equity in Action: From Famed to Fraught, Private Equity in Action: I’m Lovin’ It, Private Equity in Action: Narrative Collapse?, Private Equity in Action: The Great Garage Door Service Wars, Private Equity in Action: Having to Show Their Math is New Experience, Private Equity in Action: Underperforming, Perfidious Private Equity
Private Equity in Action: “The Cancer is Trying to Spread”

A characteristically friendly reception to PE-owned WP Engine from the WordPress community.
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Introducing Amazon Basics Air Defense

Because Amazon always tries to turn cost centers into revenue…
Related:
‘It means missile defence on datacentres’: drone strikes raise doubts over Gulf as AI superpower, Iran threatens Nvidia, Microsoft, other tech companies with strikes over alleged attack on Tehran bank — says that economic centers and banks are now considered legitimate targets, Sources: Meta has paused the Persian Gulf section of its 2Africa subsea cable project as the war in the Middle East freezes activity in the region
Quick(er) Hits
Bronny’s Boffo Bid: Middle Eastern funding in peril? Waving Goodbye to a Major Source of Global Capital, Iran War Imperils $300 Billion in Gulf AI Spending
Bronny’s Boffo Bid: Chinese money instead? Tencent Is Said to Be Back On Paramount-Warner Bros Deal With Fresh Funding (We are not a serious country).
Challenging the Tik Tok Travesty. Promising!
Amazon Strategy Outages (continued): Amazon holds engineering meeting following AI-related outages
There is no more wretched hive of spam and villainy than Firebase. Google needs to clean this up.




