⬤ Oracle's stock is trying to catch its breath after a pretty rough few months. The shares have been sliding since November, but now they're settling around the $198 mark and showing fewer signs of panic selling. After dropping from above $300 earlier in the quarter, ORCL seems to be finding some stability rather than continuing its fall.
⬤ The technical picture shows Oracle hovering near a key moving average that's been important historically. When you look at the chart, the recent price action has flattened out instead of pushing lower. That's usually a sign that the worst might be over for now. The stock isn't bouncing back aggressively, but it's stopped bleeding the way it was through November and early December.
⬤ Momentum indicators are backing up this calmer outlook. The histogram that tracks buying and selling pressure had been deeply negative during the selloff but is now shrinking. Signal lines are also turning up from oversold territory. These aren't screaming "buy," but they do suggest the selling exhaustion is real and the stock might be shifting into a consolidation phase rather than gearing up for another leg down.
⬤ What makes this matter beyond just Oracle shareholders is the company's weight in the tech sector. As a major enterprise software and cloud player, when ORCL transitions from freefall to steadier trading, it tends to ease some anxiety across the broader market. The AI-based forecast on the chart projects a fairly contained price range into early 2026, which fits with the idea that Oracle's wild ride might be giving way to something more predictable as we head into the new year.
Saad Ullah
Saad Ullah