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Why Oracle may cut 30,000 jobs to build data centers

March 12, 2026
in Human Resources
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Why Oracle may cut 30,000 jobs to build data centers
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When Oracle HCM leaders told HR teams at Oracle AI World last October that 2026 would be “the year of operationalizing AI,” the promise screamed scaling technology. Four months later, when Oracle announced a $50 billion capital raise for AI infrastructure, HR Executive reported that HR leaders should watch whether that buildout would pull resources away from HCM product development.

Trading people for infrastructure?

According to widespread reports of a research note from investment bank TD Cowen, Oracle is evaluating cuts of 20,000 to 30,000 employees from its 162,000-person workforce. Oracle has not publicly announced the reported job cuts, and executives and spokespeople did not confirm or deny layoffs during the third-quarter fiscal 2026 earnings call.

This is a reduction TD Cowen estimates would generate $8 billion to $10 billion in cash flow.

The stated purpose, per the note, is funding an aggressive AI data center buildout that now carries a capital expenditure commitment of roughly $50 billion for fiscal 2026, $30 billion of which Oracle has already raised through bonds and convertible preferred stock.

The cuts would come even as Oracle’s HCM business is growing. Fusion HCM was up 15% in Q3, part of a broader quarter executives described as exceeding expectations across the board.

What HR leaders should note is the mechanism. This is not a workforce reduction driven by falling revenue or missed targets. Oracle’s remaining performance obligations stood at $523 billion as of last quarter, up 433% year over year, the company reported. The cuts, if confirmed, would be a direct trade: people for infrastructure.

Oracle and the hyperscalers

That calculus is becoming more visible across the tech sector, according to reporting from multiple sources. Amazon, Google, Meta and Microsoft have all announced massive 2026 capital expenditure plans—ranging from roughly $115 billion to $200 billion each—primarily earmarked for AI and cloud data centers.

Oracle’s situation is more acute because, unlike hyperscalers (a fancy word for very large cloud and AI platforms) with deeper balance sheets, it has had to rely heavily on financing to fund its buildout. TD Cowen noted that multiple U.S. banks have pulled back from Oracle-linked project lending.

For HR and talent leaders inside Oracle or in organizations that rely on Oracle HCM and related products, the uncertainty extends beyond headcount. Analysts have flagged a potential sale of Cerner, Oracle’s healthcare software unit, as another lever the company may pull, a move that would affect both Oracle employees and the HR tech buyers those teams support.


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