Oracle's massive AI layoffs are here
The reductions are expected to affect divisions across the company and are wider in scope than Oracle's typical rolling cuts. Oracle stock rose 5%

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Oracle $ORCL has begun notifying employees of thousands of job cuts, according to CNBC, as the company contends with a cash crunch tied to its aggressive expansion into AI data center infrastructure.
The reductions are expected to affect divisions across the company and are wider in scope than Oracle's typical rolling cuts, according to Bloomberg. Some positions being eliminated fall into job categories the company expects to need less of due to AI, though the primary driver is financial pressure from the data center buildout. Oracle declined to comment.
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Oracle stock rose about 5% Tuesday afternoon on the news of the layoffs.
Oracle, which employed 162,000 people globally as of May 2025, has been leaning on debt markets to finance its AI infrastructure push. In January, the company announced plans to raise $50 billion through a combination of debt and equity. Wall Street projects the spending will push Oracle's cash flow negative for several years before the investment begins to pay off around 2030, according to Bloomberg.
TD Cowen analysts wrote in January that cutting 20,000 to 30,000 employees could generate $8 billion to $10 billion in incremental free cash flow.
The layoffs reflect a broader dynamic in the tech industry. The workers being cut are not losing jobs because AI can perform their work. They are losing jobs to the capital now being directed toward chips, data centers, and infrastructure. Microsoft $MSFT cut roughly 15,000 employees last year while simultaneously ramping data center spending. Oracle's situation follows the same pattern: corporate payrolls are being trimmed to help fund AI investment, not because AI has replaced the people doing the work.
Oracle has continued to report strong demand for its cloud infrastructure. On an earnings call earlier this month, co-CEO Clay Magouyrk said demand for AI infrastructure "continues to exceed supply" and pointed to $553 billion in remaining performance obligations as evidence. The company also said it does not expect to raise additional debt in 2026.