Oracle (ORCL, Financials) fell for a seventh straight session, closing down 0.82% at $146.55 as selling pressure continued to build around the stock.

The decline adds to a difficult stretch for the software and cloud company. Oracle had already lost nearly 15.6% over the previous six sessions, and the stock is now down about 24% year to date. That compares with a 9.1% gain for the S&P 500 Index. Over the past month, shares have fallen more than 36%.

The pullback comes even as analysts remain mostly constructive. Of the 42 Wall Street analysts cited, 36 rate Oracle Buy or Strong Buy, while five have Hold ratings and one rates the stock Strong Sell.

Seeking Alpha analysts also remain positive. Analyst Daniel Jones recently reiterated a Strong Buy rating, pointing to Oracle's cloud expansion, fiscal 2026 revenue growth of 20.6% and stronger operating cash flow.

Still, the market appears focused on near-term risks. Seeking Alpha's Quant Rating assigns Oracle a Hold, with weaker grades for valuation and momentum despite an A+ profitability score.

Investors are now watching whether Oracle can show continued cloud demand and justify management's fiscal 2027 growth outlook.