Oracle prepares new round of layoffs while doubling down on AI infrastructure

Skye Jacobs

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What we know so far: Oracle is preparing for another wave of job cuts as part of a major restructuring plan, even as it ramps up investment in artificial intelligence and cloud infrastructure. The company has added $500 million to its restructuring budget for the fiscal year, bringing the total to $2.1 billion – a move analysts say signals that thousands more positions could be eliminated in the coming months.

The expanded fund, disclosed in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission following Oracle's quarterly earnings report, has heightened concerns that the company's restructuring will carry a significant human cost. Oracle has spent roughly $982 million of the budget so far, largely on severance, leaving about $1.1 billion in restructuring funds before the fiscal year ends on May 31.

RBC Capital Markets analyst Rishi Jaluria said the move suggests the restructuring – which is often a euphemism for layoffs – could be broader than earlier this fiscal year. Oracle's first round of job cuts last year affected more than 3,000 employees across the US, Canada, and India, eliminating much of its middle-management layer in sales and marketing. The remaining funds could easily support another round of comparable size, according to people familiar with the company's operations.

Credit: App Economy Insights

Although Oracle has not formally announced new layoffs, internal signals have left employees unsettled. At a packed all-hands meeting in Nashville – soon to become the company's new global headquarters – co-chief executives Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia struck an upbeat tone about quarterly performance and the benefits of the relocation.

However, attendees reported that both leaders emphasized how AI coding tools can automate many programming tasks and accelerate product mock-ups, echoing Oracle's message to investors that the technology allows it to build more software in less time with fewer people. That emphasis left teams in legacy support and non-core operations concerned that layoffs could be imminent.

Analysts at TD Cowen have previously reported that Oracle is exploring plans to cut as many as 30,000 jobs and sell non-core business units as part of a broader effort to fund its AI expansion.

Meanwhile, the company is racing to build facilities capable of handling massive GPU-based workloads for clients such as OpenAI. Constructing and maintaining these centers requires billions in capital and new borrowing, costs that investors are watching closely.

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Gotta make those investors happy!

"Yeah, we spent a bunch of money on AI, but the layoffs are coming! Just stay calm, those employees that helped us build our AI is now getting replaced by the AI they built!.....
.....do they know we're laying everyone off because we've accumulated so much debt that we can't afford to pay our employees anymore? Hopefully this AI can help us find more accounting tricks so we can defer posting our losses for another quarter"
 
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The chart showing Oracle's free clash flow is quite telling. They went from having in excess of $10 billion on hand to being $25 billion in the red in less than two years, all because of this AI nonsense. Out of all the AI focused companies everyone loathes I despise Oracle the most. These people would skin their own mothers if it meant they could sell that skin for a hefty profit. That's how focused they're on money. I hope their AI rush comes back and bites them so hard the entire company collapses.
 
The chart showing Oracle's free clash flow is quite telling. They went from having in excess of $10 billion on hand to being $25 billion in the red in less than two years, all because of this AI nonsense. Out of all the AI focused companies everyone loathes I despise Oracle the most. These people would skin their own mothers if it meant they could sell that skin for a hefty profit. That's how focused they're on money. I hope their AI rush comes back and bites them so hard the entire company collapses.
If AI kills Oracle I dare say AI is useful and effective. We need more of it!

I walk by Oracle's Amsterdam lair almost daily and I swear the place oozes evil.
 
One company I worked for years ago one day received a letter stating that any company of a certain size in our particular industry was suspected of needing at least some Oracle database servers, but that they had no record of any active licences. They instructed us to respond with a count or we might expect a visit by an auditing team. We ignored it and to this day I have never allowed any Oracle deployments whereever I go. Because eff everything about that company.
 
Dear Larry, how will that $2bn "restructuring" help with your $100bn debt, you friggin' genius?

I swear to god, all these billionaires are nothing more than a bunch of lucky morons who were in the right place at the right time, perpetually kept rich by the law of "money breeds money".
 
What charts? I see them numbers green everywhere - revenue, profit, capital, etc...
What do you mean? There's a chart showing red bars that represent Oracle's cash on hand for each quarter all the way back to Feb 21. Every quarter their cash on hand was between $5 and $14 billion, except for the latest quarters which show $0 dollars, -$6 billion, -$13 billion, and their most recent filing from last month shows -$25 billion.

Here's a direct link to the chart: https://www.techspot.com/images2/news/bigimage/2026/03/2026-03-12-image-5.png
 
If AI kills Oracle I dare say AI is useful and effective. We need more of it!

I walk by Oracle's Amsterdam lair almost daily and I swear the place oozes evil.
Kill it? Not really. Just declare bankruptcy and rise free and clear. The only people screwed are the non billionaires.
 
Another year, another AI disaster waiting to happen.

These companies don't show profits soon from AI, then hopefully it will be the CEO and directors losing their jobs.
 
The tragic part is even of the AI bubble pops, the C-level and owners responsible will STILL BE EMPLOYED while the employees who built it over 25 years will be losing their houses .. and the few c-levels that get let go? 8 digit goodbye payouts...
 
Teams in legacy support are worried about imminent layoffs...

Legacy support at Oracle means keeping alive database infrastructure that half the world's banks, hospitals, and governments quietly depend on and cannot replace.

The most boring, unglamorous, essential work in enterprise computing. Absolutely first on the chopping block the moment someone says the word AI in a boardroom.
 
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