Mad Money

Oracle CEO touts demand for cloud business after the company's stock tumbled last week

Key Points
  • Oracle CEO Safra Catz emphasized the enterprise software company's cloud business in an interview with CNBC's Jim Cramer.
  • Catz said Oracle had booked billion-dollar AI workloads in the first few weeks of the second quarter.
Oracle CEO Safra Catz: We spent a lot of this year setting up the base for our cloud
VIDEO2:1502:15
Oracle CEO Safra Catz: We spent a lot of this year setting up the base for our cloud

In an interview with CNBC's Jim Cramer, Oracle CEO Safra Catz, expounded on the enterprise software company's cloud business, and noted that the company is booking billion-dollar deals.

"For us, we have so much demand that we just keep booking it," Catz said. "In fact, in the first week of this quarter, we booked another billion and a half just in AI workloads, and we keep winning every single competition against others because our system's so much newer. We have access to the chips and so, because it's so much newer, it is much faster."

Oracle saw its stock fall 12%, its steepest drop since 2002, after it reported first-quarter earnings last week and gave weaker-than-expected guidance for its second quarter.

The company recently announced it would be putting its database services on its cloud infrastructure inside data centers of Microsoft's cloud unit Azure. Catz explained that Oracle spent much of last year setting up the basics for its cloud business, and is now starting to fill data centers with software that she said is newer and more effective than the competition.

"In the cloud, time is money," she said. "We're just rolling out and filling those data centers and, [it] costs a lot. But remember, we build our own computers. We've got everything optimized, and it's much, much faster."

Catz also said Oracle's acquisition of Cerner, an electronic health record software company, will create payoffs down the line. During a recent conference call with analysts, Catz said the "accelerated transition" of Cerner to the cloud was causing some "near-term headwinds" to revenue.

"We don't recognize a lot of that revenue upfront, but over time, that's where the big payoff is," she said. "Remember, we didn't want to leave Cerner just as it was. We wanted to modernize it, and we're doing that with all of the technology that we have to do it."

This story has been updated to clarify Oracle's partnership with Microsoft.

Oracle CEO Safra Catz goes one-on-one with Jim Cramer
VIDEO10:0710:07
Oracle CEO Safra Catz goes one-on-one with Jim Cramer

Jim Cramer's Guide to Investing

Click here to download Jim Cramer's Guide to Investing at no cost to help you build long-term wealth and invest smarter.

Sign up now for the CNBC Investing Club to follow Jim Cramer's every move in the market.

Disclaimer The CNBC Investing Club Charitable Trust holds shares of Oracle.

Questions for Cramer?
Call Cramer: 1-800-743-CNBC

Want to take a deep dive into Cramer's world? Hit him up!
Mad Money Twitter - Jim Cramer Twitter - Facebook - Instagram

Questions, comments, suggestions for the "Mad Money" website? madcap@cnbc.com