Tech News
← Back to articles

Oracle is building yesterday's data centers with tomorrow's debt

read original related products more articles

Artificial intelligence chips are getting upgraded more quickly than data centers can be built, a market reality that exposes a key risk to the AI trade and Oracle's debt-fueled expansion.

OpenAI is no longer planning to expand its partnership with Oracle in Abilene, Texas, home to the Stargate data center, because it wants clusters with newer generations of Nvidia graphics processing units, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The current Abilene site is expected to use Nvidia's Blackwell processors, and the power isn't projected to come online for a year. By then, OpenAI is hoping to have expanded access to Nvidia's next-generation chips in bigger clusters elsewhere, said the person, who asked not to be named due to confidentiality.

Bloomberg was first to report on the companies ending their plans for expansion in Abilene. In a post on X on Sunday, Oracle called news reports about the activity, "false and incorrect," but the post only said existing projects are on track and didn't address expansion plans.

Oracle secured the site, ordered the hardware, and spent billions of dollars on construction and staff, with the expectation of going bigger.

An Oracle spokesperson declined to comment.

It's a logical decision for OpenAI, which doesn't want older chips. Nvidia used to release a new generation of data center processors every two years. Now, CEO Jensen Huang has the company shipping one every year, and each generation offers a leap in capability. Vera Rubin, unveiled at CES in January and already in production, delivers five times the inference performance of Blackwell.

For the companies building frontier models, the smallest improvement in performance could equate to huge gaps in model benchmarks and rankings, which are closely followed by developers and translate directly to usage, revenue, and valuation.

That all points to a bigger problem at play. For infrastructure companies, securing a site, connecting power and standing up a facility takes 12 to 24 months at minimum. But customers want the latest and greatest, and they're tracking the yearly chip upgrades.

Oracle's added challenge is that it's the only hyperscaler funding its buildout primarily with debt, to the tune of $100 billion and counting. Google , Amazon and Microsoft , by contrast, are leaning on their enormous cash-generating businesses.

... continue reading