Oracle Slump Sends Ellison Sliding Down Ranks Of World’s Richest
Oracle’s shares gained 36% on Sept. 10 after the Austin-based company reported soaring demand for its AI-adjacent cloud infrastructure business.

A frenzied, AI-fueled rally in Oracle Corp. stock briefly made Larry Ellison the world’s richest person in September. But a prolonged slump since then has seen the tech giant give up all those gains and more, delivering a $130 billion hit to Ellison’s net worth.
Oracle’s swoon has vaulted Alphabet Inc. co-founder Larry Page past Ellison and into the number two spot on the Bloomberg Billionaires Index for the first time.
Page, 52, who served two stints as Google’s chief executive officer before it was restructured as Alphabet, now has a net worth of $256.9 billion, his highest total ever. He still trails Elon Musk’s $421.8 billion, while Ellison, 81, slipped to third place with $253.3 billion.
Oracle’s shares gained 36% on Sept. 10 after the Austin-based company reported soaring demand for its AI-adjacent cloud infrastructure business. That added $89 billion to Ellison’s net worth, the largest one-day gain ever recorded by Bloomberg’s wealth index.
However, it only took two months to wipe out those gains. Oracle’s AI ambitions are closely tied to OpenAI and is counting on hundreds of billions of dollars in revenues from OpenAI over the next few years. That’s far more cash than the large language model developer is currently generating.
Markets have also wavered as Oracle has leaned more heavily on debt financing. It’s preparing a $38 billion bond offering to pay for AI data center construction, even as its net adjusted debt already hovers around $100 billion. The company’s shares have seen six straight weekly declines since its September peak, with its stock down 39% from its all-time high, closing Friday at $198.76.
Alphabet’s shares, meanwhile, have jumped 58% this year, including 3.5% on Friday, following a wave of favourable reviews for its Gemini AI model, renewing hopes it could be competitive with peers including Anthropic and OpenAI. That helped add $88.6 billion to Page’s net worth in 2025, according to Bloomberg’s wealth index.
While neither Page nor Alphabet co-founder Sergey Brin, 52, currently hold operational titles, Brin said at a conference earlier this year that he planned on returning to a more hands-on role at the company.
Brin is currently ranked fifth on Bloomberg’s wealth list with a net worth of $239.9 billion.
