Email this article   Print article 


Ellison Cites Sun Buy As Driver Of Oracle Q2 Growth

By Jack McCarthy
December 18, 2012    6:16 PM ET

Oracle appeared to fire on all cylinders in its quarterly performance reported Tuesday, showing growth in every segment.

For the second fiscal quarter of 2013 ending Nov. 30, Oracle reported earnings growth of 18 percent to $2.6 billion, with revenue increasing 3 percent to $9.1 billion.

Oracle earned 53 cents per share, up 24 percent from the year-ago period and above analysts' expectations of 48 cents per share.

[Related: Ellison Looks Back As Oracle Turns 30]

Revenues increased across all of Redwood City, Calif.-based Oracle's sectors. New software licenses and cloud software subscriptions revenue rose to $2.4 billion, up 17 percent. Software license updates and product support revenue grew 7 percent to $4.3 billion.

CEO Larry Ellison pointed to the 2010 acquisition of Sun Microsystems as a key growth driver.

"Our $7.4 billion purchase of Sun is turning out to be the most profitable investment ever made," he said. Sun-related products such as SPARC Supercluster and Exadata database are driving revenue in the hardware business, he said.

Safra Catz, Oracle president and CFO, said the revenue growth for the quarter reflected the broad choice of Oracle products available to customers. "No one else has everything we have, and, as a result, when customers come to us they buy many things."

PUBLISHED DEC. 18, 2012

To continue reading this article, please download the free CRN Tech News app for your iPad or Windows 8 device.
Related: Videos | Slide Shows | Comments

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

More Applications & OS

Recent Articles

10 Key Android Jelly Bean Traits For VARs

Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean delivers thousands of new features, including beaming, multiple users and lock-screen widgets, and is the most powerful and versatile version yet.

Paul Maritz's 10 Commandments Of Big Data

It's not easy building a platform that will launch thousands of new big data applications and services, but that is just what Pivotal CEO Paul Maritz is doing.

CRN Exclusive: 20 Tough Big Data Questions For Pivotal's Paul Maritz

Pivotal CEO Paul Maritz spoke exclusively to CRN about how the ambitious new big data venture from EMC and VMware will tackle Amazon Web Services.

  More Slide Shows




Related Videos
Loading...