TLDR
- Oracle started notifying thousands of employees of layoffs, with no prior warning from HR or management
- TD Cowen estimates cuts could affect 20,000–30,000 workers, around 18% of the global workforce
- The stock jumped nearly 6% Tuesday and rose another ~2.6% in premarket Wednesday
- Barclays kept its overweight rating, saying the cuts will free up cash flow and help long-term revenue
- Oracle’s stock is still down roughly 25% year-to-date despite the recent bounce
Oracle sent termination notices to thousands of employees across the US, India, Canada, Mexico, and other regions on Tuesday, March 31. Most notices arrived before 6 a.m. local time, with no heads-up from HR or direct managers.
TD Cowen estimates the layoff round could hit between 20,000 and 30,000 workers — roughly 18% of Oracle’s 162,000-person global workforce. Oracle has not officially confirmed the total figure, and a spokesperson declined to comment.
The market reacted positively. ORCL closed at $147.11 on April 1, up nearly 6%, and continued higher in premarket trading Wednesday, adding another ~2.6%.
Still, context matters: the stock is down roughly 25% so far in 2025, weighed down by investor concerns over heavy capital spending on AI data center infrastructure.
In early February, Oracle announced plans to raise up to $50 billion during the 2025 calendar year through a mix of debt and equity. The goal is to expand cloud capacity for customers including Nvidia, Meta, OpenAI, AMD, and xAI.
That level of capital expenditure has made investors nervous. It puts pressure on free cash flow without a clear near-term return on investment.
The layoffs are seen as a move to balance that equation. By cutting headcount, Oracle can redirect operating costs toward infrastructure spending.
Analyst Take
Barclays analysts said in a note that the job cuts will help free up cash flow. They maintained their overweight rating on the stock.
“Given ORCL’s existing FY26 Restructuring Plan and prior reports, we do not see today’s layoffs as being a surprise to the market,” the analysts wrote.
Barclays also pointed out that Oracle generates less profit per employee than most of its peers — a metric that has long been a talking point for the bull case on restructuring.
The bank expects Oracle to triple its revenue over the next few years, driven by minimal headcount growth and low operating costs going forward.
The Bigger Picture
Oracle isn’t alone in ramping AI infrastructure spend. Major hyperscalers — Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon — have collectively committed nearly $700 billion in capital expenditure this year for AI buildouts.
That level of spending has rattled markets broadly, as investors weigh long-term AI ambitions against near-term cash flow pressure.
For Oracle specifically, the restructuring plan was already in place heading into 2026. The scale of Tuesday’s notices, however, appears to have caught employees off guard even if Wall Street had anticipated something like this.
ORCL closed at $147.11 on April 1, 2026, up nearly 6% on the session.







