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Oracle shares sink after annual filing reveals 13% workforce cuts

by June 23, 2026
written by June 23, 2026

Oracle’s stock fell on Monday after the company disclosed that it cut about 21,000 jobs, or 13% of its workforce, in fiscal 2026 as part of a broader restructuring tied to its artificial intelligence push.

At the time of writing, shares of Oracle Corporation were trading around $175.07, down about 5% from the previous close.

Oracle discloses 13% workforce reduction

Oracle said in its annual report released on Monday that its total workforce stood at 141,000 as of May 31, 2026, compared with about 162,000 a year earlier.

That translates into a decline of roughly 21,000 employees over the fiscal year.

The company said the workforce adjustments were driven by several factors, including management and product changes, performance issues, strategic shifts, and acquisitions.

The filing also suggested the restructuring was partly linked to the adoption of AI across Oracle’s operations.

Oracle spent $1.84 billion in severance payments and other exit costs tied to restructuring activities in fiscal 2026.

That was sharply higher than the $374 million it spent in the previous fiscal year, according to the filing.

The disclosure followed multiple reports earlier this year that Oracle had cut thousands of jobs.

Layoffs come as AI disruption fears rise

Oracle’s workforce reduction comes amid broader concerns over job losses linked to artificial intelligence across the technology sector.

According to Layoffs. fyi, 196 tech companies have laid off more than 119,800 employees so far this year.

For Oracle, the layoffs appear to be part of a larger effort to reallocate resources rather than a retreat from growth.

The company is reshaping its cost base and workforce as it tries to expand its position in cloud computing and AI infrastructure.

The scale of the cuts has drawn attention because Oracle is simultaneously pursuing an aggressive investment strategy.

That has raised investor focus on how the company plans to balance hiring, cost controls, and profitability while funding a major expansion push.

AI and cloud expansion add to spending pressure

Oracle, long seen as a smaller player in cloud computing than some of its larger rivals, has in recent months signed major data-centre deals with OpenAI and Meta as it looks to compete more directly with Amazon and Microsoft.

That strategy is expected to come with a steep price tag.

Oracle said earlier this month that it expects net capital expenditure of around $70 billion in its current fiscal year.

To help fund that spending, the company said it would raise another $40 billion in debt and equity, including a previously announced $20 billion stock issuance.

Unlike larger technology peers that can fund heavy investment through stronger cash flows, Oracle has had to rely more heavily on debt issuance and cash burn to support its expansion plans.

Its shares were already down about 10% this year before Monday’s decline.

The company has been under pressure to show that its spending on cloud and AI infrastructure can translate into durable growth without putting excessive strain on margins and cash flow.

India is among the hardest-hit regions

India appears to be one of the hardest-hit regions in Oracle’s latest round of layoffs, with reports suggesting that more than 12,000 employees were affected.

Before the cuts, Oracle’s workforce in India was estimated at around 30,000 employees.

In the US, one of the clearest official disclosures came through a WARN filing in Washington, where Oracle said 491 remote and Seattle-area employees would be laid off effective June 1, 2026.

The layoffs have attracted close attention because Oracle is not a company in retreat.

Instead, it is trying to move resources quickly toward areas it sees as critical to future growth.

The latest filing shows the cost of that shift, both in job losses and in the higher restructuring bill that accompanied it.

For investors, the filing underscored two parallel themes.

Oracle is cutting jobs and simplifying parts of its business as it pivots more aggressively toward AI.

The post Oracle shares sink after annual filing reveals 13% workforce cuts appeared first on Invezz

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