Microsoft walked away from a $3 billion-plus deal to lease Oracle cloud capacity because the platform lacked a key US government security certification, people familiar with the matter said.
Microsoft walked away from a $3 billion-plus deal to lease Oracle cloud capacity because the platform lacked a key US government security certification, people familiar with the matter said.

Microsoft walked away from a $3 billion-plus deal to lease Oracle cloud capacity because the platform lacked a key US government security certification, people familiar with the matter said.
Microsoft was in advanced talks to lease computing infrastructure from Oracle Cloud Infrastructure in a deal that could have exceeded $3 billion, according to three people familiar with the discussions. The plan fell apart after Microsoft determined that Oracle's public cloud did not hold FedRAMP authorization — a standardized security framework required for handling US government data — and Oracle was unwilling to add it, one of the people said.
"Adding FedRAMP to Oracle's public cloud would be a massive engineering lift," an Oracle executive told Business Insider, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. Oracle's government cloud already meets the standard, but its broader public cloud does not. An Oracle spokesperson called the details "inaccurate" without specifying which elements, while Microsoft declined to comment.
The failed talks highlight a growing reality of the AI boom: even the world's largest technology companies are running short on computing power. Microsoft recently projected its capital expenditures for the 2026 calendar year would reach $190 billion, largely to expand data center capacity. The company has already turned to Amazon Web Services to add capacity for its GitHub code development business after recent outages. "We are shopping for capacity everywhere," one of the people said.
The scramble for computing resources is driving an unusual wave of partnerships and capacity-sharing agreements across the industry. SpaceX and Google recently disclosed a deal in which Google will pay SpaceX $920 million a month for AI compute capacity from October 2026 through June 2029 — a deal that emerged just two months after Google's own cloud business agreed to sell AI compute capacity to Anthropic. Amazon and Google's public clouds both hold FedRAMP authorization, giving them a compliance advantage over Oracle for government-adjacent workloads.
Microsoft is still evaluating options for leasing cloud infrastructure from other providers, the people said. The company's strategy involves prioritizing its own Azure cloud resources for direct customers while seeking external capacity for internal workloads and secondary businesses. For Oracle, losing a potential $3 billion-plus deal raises questions about the competitiveness of its cloud platform relative to the three hyperscalers — Amazon, Microsoft and Google — that dominate the market.
Microsoft shares trade at roughly 30x forward earnings, with the company's $190 billion CapEx plan signaling confidence that AI-driven demand will absorb the investment. Oracle shares have gained about 40% over the past 12 months as its cloud business has grown, but the failed Microsoft deal suggests compliance gaps could limit its addressable market among enterprise and government clients. The broader cloud infrastructure sector faces increased scrutiny on security standards as capacity constraints push companies toward cross-provider leasing arrangements.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.