Key TakeawaysORCL shares have declined nine trading sessions in a row, shedding 24% in what marks the company’s most extended losing period since late 2021Shares have lost 28% in 2026 so far and are trading 57% below the September 2025 peak of $248.15Wall Street remains optimistic with 84% of analysts maintaining Buy recommendations and a consensus target near $263.86Retail traders are accumulating shares — ORCL ranked first among major tech stocks for retail purchases over the last 30 days, surpassing Nvidia, Meta, Amazon, Microsoft, and AlphabetMarket anxiety stems from Oracle’s aggressive capital spending strategy and expanding debt obligationsOracle delivered impressive fourth-quarter fiscal 2026 earnings on June 10, posting $19.2 billion in sales—a 21% jump from the previous year—while surpassing analyst projections for both revenue and earnings. Management also upgraded its profitability forecast. Markets responded with indifference.Oracle Corporation, ORCLFrom its 2026 peak of $248.15 reached on June 1, shares have declined on 18 of the following 22 trading sessions. The current nine-day consecutive decline of 24% represents the most prolonged downturn since December 2021. ORCL now trades approximately 57% beneath its all-time closing record established on September 10, 2025.The timing adds to the puzzle. While Oracle continues sliding, the wider software industry has been rebounding. The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF (IGV) has climbed for five straight sessions, gaining over 10% during that period. Oracle charts the opposite course.Most market observers point to financial strategy concerns—particularly Oracle’s spending velocity and how the company funds its operations. The enterprise has accumulated substantial debt to bankroll its artificial intelligence infrastructure expansion, and shareholders seem increasingly anxious about the capital deployment pace.Analyst Community Maintains ConvictionThe recent selloff hasn’t shaken Wall Street confidence. Among analysts tracking the stock, 84% assign Buy ratings—a percentage exceeded only once during the past two decades, briefly during May 2011.The consensus price objective hovers around $263.86, suggesting approximately 88% appreciation potential from present levels. Mizuho’s Siti Panigrahi maintains one of the Street’s most aggressive targets at $320, designating Oracle as a premier recommendation while highlighting its “end to end AI stack across database, infrastructure, and applications.” Panigrahi acknowledges financing obstacles as a material concern, observing that Oracle will probably require external capital to support its spending blueprint.KeyBanc researchers elevated their projections recently, expressing growing confidence that operating expense expansion will remain subdued. They preserved an Overweight stance with a $300 target, emphasizing that disciplined operating costs represent “where future upside will come from.”Individual Investors Accumulate SharesWhile institutional capital observes cautiously, individual investors are taking the opposite approach. Information from TipRanks’ Crowd Wisdom platform, monitoring over 868,000 retail portfolios, reveals ORCL experienced more purchasing volume during the past 30 days than comparable technology giants.During the previous month, 3.8% of monitored portfolios initiated or expanded ORCL positions. This exceeds the 3.6% for Microsoft, 3.5% for Nvidia, 2.9% for both Amazon and Alphabet, and 2.2% for Meta.Among the 32 analysts providing coverage during the past quarter, 28 issued Buy recommendations with just four Hold ratings—creating a Strong Buy consensus without a single Sell rating.Oracle hasn’t announced its next quarterly reporting date, though the Q4 results that preceded the selloff featured $19.2 billion in revenue alongside an improved profitability outlook.The post Oracle (ORCL) Stock Down 24% in 9 Days: Analysts Still See 88% Upside Potential appeared first on Blockonomi.