Insider transaction details
Stuart Levey, who serves as Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer at Oracle Corp (NYSE:ORCL), sold 15,000 shares of Oracle common stock on April 16, 2026. The shares were sold at $176.19 apiece, producing proceeds of approximately $2,642,850. At the time the company’s shares were trading at $177.56.
The sale was carried out pursuant to a Rule 10b5-1 trading arrangement that Mr. Levey adopted on January 13, 2026. After this transaction, Mr. Levey directly holds 3,429 shares of Oracle common stock. The transaction was reported to the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 20, 2026.
Market context
Oracle’s share price had risen 14% over the week leading up to the trade, following a six-month period in which the stock fell 36%. The company is identified in the provided analysis as having a market capitalization of $509.92 billion. An InvestingPro note included in the reporting characterizes Oracle as appearing undervalued and points to Pro Research Reports covering the company and more than 1,400 other U.S. equities.
Corporate developments mentioned in the filing
- Oracle announced an extension of its multicloud networking capabilities in collaboration with Amazon Web Services. The partnership is described as enabling private, high-speed connections between Oracle Cloud Infrastructure and AWS for customers running applications and moving data.
- The company is reported to be near completion of a $38 billion loan package to support data center projects in Texas and Wisconsin. That loan package is described as being backed by JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group.
- Following an expanded strategic partnership with Bloom Energy, JMP Securities is reported to have maintained a Market Outperform rating on Oracle. The partnership cited involves Oracle contracting an initial 1.2 GW of capacity, with potential to increase to 2.8 GW.
- Oracle has introduced new artificial intelligence features to its Primavera Unifier software. The updates are said to include AI-driven workflow summaries intended to help project teams prioritize tasks in capital project delivery.
What the filing shows and its limits
The filing makes clear the sale was executed under a preexisting Rule 10b5-1 plan, which indicates the transaction was prearranged. The report also documents Mr. Levey’s remaining direct holdings and the timing of the SEC disclosure. Beyond those recorded facts, the filing does not provide additional commentary from the insider on motivations for the sale.
Readers should note the separate operational and financing developments cited in the filing, including cloud networking arrangements, a large loan package for data center expansion, an energy capacity agreement, and software updates designed to improve capital project workflows. Each of these items was presented in the reporting as distinct company announcements or analyst commentary.