Elon Musk’s title of richest person challenged by Oracle’s Larry Ellison

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison (left) is currently worth about US$406 billion, while Tesla CEO Elon Musk is worth roughly US$440 billion.

Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison (left) is currently worth about US$406 billion, while Tesla CEO Elon Musk is worth roughly US$440 billion.

PHOTOS: AFP, REUTERS

Follow topic:
  • Larry Ellison's wealth surged past US$400 billion due to Oracle's AI-driven stock rise, challenging Elon Musk's top position.
  • Oracle's cloud revenue is projected to increase significantly to US$144 billion, driven by multi-billion-dollar contracts.
  • Oracle shares jumped 40% to $338, lifting the company's market value to $950 billion, fuelled by strong cloud growth.

AI generated

NEW YORK - Billionaire Elon Musk is at risk of losing his title of world’s wealthiest person to Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, whose software giant stands poised for massive AI riches through a major deal with OpenAI.

Mr Ellison, 81, amassed about US$95 billion (S$121.8 billion) in additional wealth on Sept 10 as Oracle shares skyrocketed after the nearly 50-year-old company

forecast massive revenue growth

thanks to large contracts that will dwarf current revenue.

That rise lifted Mr Ellison’s overall wealth to nearly US$390 billion, compared with Mr Musk’s roughly US$436 billion, according to a Forbes real-time billionaire’s index.

A Bloomberg wealth index placed Mr Ellison’s bounty slightly ahead of Mr Musk’s, designating the Oracle chief number one at the moment.

The difference in the tallies relates to how some of their huge holdings are estimated.

Mr Ellison and Mr Musk are close friends, with the Oracle boss often coming to Mr Musk’s aid during challenging periods in the Tesla tycoon’s career.

He invested over US$1 billion in Mr Musk’s buyout of Twitter and served on Tesla’s board for many years.

Mr Musk’s most easily estimated holding is Tesla, whose shares have fallen in 2025 amid languishing sales attributed partly to Mr Musk’s

embrace of far-right political figures.

Tesla earlier in September unveiled a compensation proposal for Mr Musk that

could top US$1 trillion through 2035

if the company hits ambitious targets. Shareholders will vote on the plan in November.

Mr Ellison, a longtime supporter of President Donald Trump, holds more than 1.1 billion shares of Oracle, accounting for more than 40 per cent of equity, according to S&P Capital IQ.

Oracle CEO Safra Catz called the just-finished quarter “astonishing” as the company signed “four multi-billion-dollar contracts with three different customers.”

Oracle projected that its cloud business revenues would grow 77 per cent in the current fiscal year to US$18 billion.

In subsequent years, revenues are expected to rise to US$32 billion, US$73 billion, US$114 billion, and US$144 billion.

The bulk of Oracle’s new contracts comes from an agreement for OpenAI to purchase some US$300 billion in computing power over roughly five years, according to a Wall Street Journal report on Sept 10 citing people familiar with the matter.

The publication described Oracle’s contract with OpenAI as a “risky gamble” for both companies that will likely require Oracle to take on additional debt to finance the AI chips.

The contract will also tie Oracle’s future to the fate of a single company, the Journal said.

On a conference call Sept 9, Mr Ellison described the company as well positioned to be a dominant force in “AI inferencing,” where the technology will lead to a more profound level of automation affecting everything from assessing medical lab results to placing bets in financial markets.

“AI is going to automatically write the computer programs that will then automate your sales processes and your legal processes and everything else in your factories and so on,” said Mr Ellison, who emphasised the appeal of adopting the new AI capabilities to Oracle’s legacy business around secure management of proprietary company data.

Mr Ellison built his fortune through Oracle, which he founded in 1977 as a data server provider for the CIA, among others.

Early on, the company competed with Microsoft, IBM, and Sun Microsystems to provide the data infrastructure for the emerging digital economy.

Mr Ellison, who publicly sparred in earlier years with Mr Bill Gates and other technology leaders, has also been known for heavy investments in professional sailing, with his Oracle team winning the America’s Cup in both 2010 and 2013.

In 2009, Mr Ellison became the owner of both the Indian Wells Tennis Garden and BNP Paribas Open, near Palm Springs, California, which is sometimes referred to as tennis’ unofficial “fifth Grand Slam.”

Oracle shares finished up 36 per cent at US$328.33, translating into a market value of around US$922 billion. AFP


See more on