There were bizarre statements in the earnings call and major red flags in the financial statements. Their announcement that executives were now going to be compensated primarily on cloud revenue is very strange, considering that SC and MH already cashed out their stock options this year to the tune of over $100,000,000. The earnings growth again was primarily due to a tax break as it was in Q4. New on-prem licenses shrank by 6%, and that was compared to a weak Q1 last year. This guarantees that Oracle's big profit engine - license renewals and maintenance (54% of revenue) - will start showing year-to-year revenue declines too. If you are not getting new customers, you are not getting customers who will renew in the coming years. The main area of growth was SaaS ... in other words, the Netsuite acquisition. Then LE said that Oracle wouldn't make any more cloud acquisitions and would concentrate on organic growth! Clearly, Oracle isn't growing organically. IaaS / PaaS showed growth on the income statement, but everybody knows that number cannot be trusted as customers are being forced to buy cloud when they renew on-prem licenses. (Microsoft has been doing the same thing for years.) Then came the weak guidance. Then add the rumors of turmoil, attrition, and layoffs on this board, almost all of which turned out to be true. Yes, I'll give Oracle this - they did show revenue growth, unlike IBM - but this growth is clearly not sustainable.
This was posted by @Phgwn0E-2ija in another thread, thought it was an excellent comment on how things are playing out at Oracle, and 100% on point.