Oracle Sued by Bondholders Over Losses Tied to AI Buildout
Oracle was sued on Wednesday by bondholders who say they suffered losses because the company chaired by billionaire Larry Ellison concealed its need to sell significant additional debt to build out its artificial intelligence infrastructure.
These investors said they were blindsided when Austin, Texas-based Oracle returned to the capital markets seven weeks later to obtain $38 billion of loans to fund two data centers in Texas and Wisconsin to support the OpenAI agreement.
“The bond market’s reaction to Oracle’s additional debt was swift and bracing,” the bondholders said, as their own debt fell in value and began trading at yields and spreads comparable to debt from lower-rated companies because of the perceived higher credit risk. Oracle’s notes and bonds carried low investment grades.
Bondholders led by the Ohio Carpenters’ Pension Plan said statements in offering documents for their bonds that Oracle “may” need to borrow more were false and misleading, because the company was already planning to do so.
The bondholders said Oracle, Ellison, former Chief Executive Safra Catz, Chief Accounting Officer Maria Smith and 16 underwriting banks are strictly liable under the federal Securities Act of 1933 for those statements, and should pay unspecified damages.
Oracle declined to comment. Lawyers for the bondholders did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
Oracle ended November with about $108 billion of outstanding notes and other borrowings.
Photo: A sign for Oracle Corporation is seen outside their offices in Santa Monica, Calif. (AP Photo/Richard Vogel, File)
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