Oracle Corp. reported quarterly revenue that topped analysts’ estimates on greater demand for its cloud-computing services while businesses are working remotely during the coronavirus pandemic.

Fiscal first-quarter sales rose 1.6 per cent to US$9.37 billion, the Redwood City, California-based company said Thursday in a statement. Analysts, on average, estimated US$9.19 billion, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Oracle’s revenue had declined 6 per cent year-over-year in the previous three-month period.

Executive Chairman Larry Ellison and Chief Executive Officer Safra Catz have tried to revamp Oracle’s business model for a new era of computing, in which software is delivered through the internet rather than shipped in boxes on discs.

The pair’s latest bet is to try to acquire the U.S. assets of video-sharing platform TikTok, owned by China’s Bytedance Ltd. While the two companies occupy very different parts of the technology market, the deal could give the world’s second-biggest software maker another anchor tenant for its public cloud services that rival Amazon.com Inc. and Microsoft Corp., as well as provide a huge amount of consumer data Oracle could sell to advertisers for its ad-targeting business, Oracle Data Cloud.

After years of largely going it alone, Oracle has signed more partnerships with other software makers in an effort to make its cloud services more appealing and useful to corporate customers. While it has lost a bid to supply cloud services to the U.S. Defense Department, the company’s partnership with Microsoft, which is also in the running to buy TikTok, means that it could one day supply cloud software to the Pentagon. The 43-year-old software maker has also made its cloud technology work inside of customers’ own server farms, for firms that are unwilling or unable to outsource computing needs. Catz described the company’s results as “fantastic.”

“I have a high level of confidence that our revenue will accelerate as we move on past COVID-19,” she said in the statement.

Profit, excluding some expenses, was 93 cents a share in the quarter that ended Aug. 31, compared with analysts’ average estimate of 86 cents.

Shares gained more than 3 per cent in extended trading after the results. Earlier, the stock closed at US$57.33 in New York, and has jumped 8.2 per cent this year.

Revenue from cloud services and license support climbed 2 per cent to US$6.95 billion. That metric includes sales from hosting customers’ data in the cloud, but a large portion is generated by maintenance fees for traditional software housed on clients’ corporate servers. Oracle said that McDonald’s Corp. has brought all of its North American financial systems to reside in Oracle’s cloud.

Cloud license and on-premise license sales increased 9 per cent to US$886 million, suggesting the company is signing more new software deals. Revenue from the company’s accounting and financial-planning application for large businesses climbed 33 per cent last quarter, while sales of NetSuite, which caters more to small- and mid-sized businesses, rose 23 per cent in the period.