Microsoft’s plan to lease cloud infrastructure from Oracle has fallen through, reportedly over a security compliance issue.
According to Business Insider, the deal — potentially worth more than $3 billion — collapsed because Oracle’s public cloud does not have FedRAMP approval. FedRAMP is the security framework required for cloud services handling U.S. government data.
Oracle’s government cloud already meets the FedRAMP standard, but its public cloud does not. Oracle was reportedly unwilling to add the certification to close the deal.
Microsoft Corporation, MSFT
MSFT stock was down 1.48% at the time of reporting. Wall Street still holds a Strong Buy consensus on the stock, based on 35 Buys and two Holds over the past three months. The average price target sits at $557.64, implying around 41.7% upside.
Oracle pushed back on the Business Insider report, saying the details were inaccurate. It did not specify which parts were wrong. An Oracle executive did confirm, however, that adding FedRAMP to its public cloud would require a major engineering effort.
Microsoft has been actively looking for extra cloud infrastructure to keep more of its own Azure capacity available for paying customers.
The company recently projected its 2026 capital expenditures will hit $190 billion, largely to expand data center capacity. That number underlines just how stretched cloud resources have become in the AI era.
Microsoft has already turned to Amazon for additional capacity to support its GitHub coding business, following recent outages. Amazon and Google’s public clouds both already carry FedRAMP approval.
The Oracle talks were part of a broader effort to plug gaps while Microsoft builds out its own infrastructure. With that deal now dead, Microsoft is reportedly still exploring other cloud-leasing options.
The collapse of a $3 billion deal over a certification issue is a reminder of how compliance requirements can quietly derail even the largest tech partnerships.
For Microsoft, the priority remains keeping Azure running smoothly for its own enterprise and government customers.
Oracle’s ORCL stock fell 2.24% on the news.
Microsoft has not made an official statement on the failed negotiations beyond what has been reported through sources familiar with the matter.
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