Oracle expands Bloom Energy deal days after receiving $400 million stock warrant

Bloom Energy’s stock soared after hours on Monday, following news of an expanded deal to provide capacity to Oracle.

The announcement came four days after Oracle was issued a warrant to purchase $400 million in Bloom Energy’s stock.

Assuming Oracle exercises the warrant, its investment is already up by over $300 million. This also touches on aspects of dividends.

Oracle is poised to construct a quick buck off an investment in Bloom Energy.

On Thursday, Oracle was issued a warrant to purchase up to 3.53 million shares of the fuel cell maker at $113.28 a share, for a total investment of $400 million, as part of an agreement published in October. After the close of trading on Monday, the two companies remarked they’re expanding a prior partnership, with Oracle contracting 1.2 gigawatts of capacity from Bloom.

Shares of Bloom soared 15% on the announcement, lifting the stock to almost $203 and marking a $316 million gain for Oracle over the warrant price. Oracle has until Oct. 9 to exercise the warrant.

In total, Oracle intends to procure up to 2.8 gigawatts of Bloom systems, according to Monday’s statement. The software firm has contracted for 1.2 gigawatts, with plans to finish the deployment in 2027. The companies first came together in July, when Bloom noted it would be delivering energy to U.S. Oracle data centers within 90 days.

“By rapidly deploying Bloom’s reliable, efficient fuel cell energy, we are quickly meeting the demands of our customers across the United States,” commented Mahesh Thiagarajan, executive vice president for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, in Monday’s statement.

Oracle was already having a excellent day.

The stock jumped almost 13% in regular trading as investors snapped up shares of software companies that have been beaten down on AI concerns. Oracle’s stock is down 20% for the year even after the rally, though it got another 1.5% bump in extended trading.

Bloom has been a major beneficiary of the AI boom as data center developers look for alternative forms of energy to meet surging demand. The company’s fuel cells provide on-site power that can be quickly installed because they don’t rely on a connection to the electric grid.

Shares of Bloom nearly quadrupled in 2025 and were up more than 100% this year as of Monday’s close. The company’s industry cap has topped $50 billion.

Bloom has already positioned hundreds of megawatts of fuel cells through deals with utilities like American Electric Power and data center developers including Equinix and Oracle. In striking a deal in October with Brookfield Asset Management to install fuel cells in AI data centers, Bloom CEO KR Sridhar noted that, “AI infrastructure must be built like a factory—with purpose, speed, and scale.”

Oracle, which has raised over $100 billion in debt to fund its massive AI data center buildout, plans to operate its Bloom fuel cells at facilities in the U.S., the statement commented.

An Oracle spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

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