Oracle to Cut Thousands of Jobs in Latest Layoffs Amid Rising AI Investment The Bridge Chronicle
Tech

Oracle to Cut Thousands of Jobs in Latest Layoffs Amid Rising AI Investment

Job cuts begin globally as Oracle faces stock slump and mounting pressure from the rapid shift towards generative AI.

Manaswi Panchbhai

The wave of tech layoffs continues, with American tech giant Oracle reportedly beginning thousands of job cuts on Tuesday, March 31. The move comes amid a decline in its stock this year, as the software company contends with a falling share price linked to substantial capital commitments toward expanding its AI infrastructure.

Join our WhatsApp Channel to Stay Updated!

Employees began receiving notifications early on Tuesday. The latest round of layoffs seems to have impacted Oracle’s employees worldwide. “After careful consideration of Oracle’s current business needs, we have made the decision to eliminate your role as part of a broader organisational change…As a result, today is your last working day,” read copies of notifications to employees viewed by Business Insider.

Oracle is grappling with mounting pressure as it tries to keep up with the rapid rise of generative AI. Its core database business faces uncertainty, while heavy AI investments and rising debt are raising investor concerns.

What’s driving the pressure:

  • Core database business under strain amid AI disruption

  • Investors worried about declining demand for traditional data systems

  • Increasing debt and weakening cash flow add pressure

  • Heavy spending on AI data centres to compete with cloud giants like Amazon

  • Plans announced to raise $50 billion, though no further debt expected in 2026

The company is reportedly facing several obstacles as it tries to keep pace with the swift expansion of generative AI. Oracle’s main line of business, selling database software, appears to be under significant strain, and investors are concerned that emerging AI models could diminish the need for traditional data systems.

The exact extent of the layoffs is still unknown, as the company has not yet issued an official statement. In the wake of these developments, investor confidence has weakened, with Oracle’s shares declining 25 per cent this year, a sharper fall than that of most other major technology firms.

WHO Declares Ebola Outbreak a Global Health Emergency After Rare Strain Kills Over 80 in Congo

PM Modi Says Pandemic, Wars and Energy Crisis Have Pushed World Into a ‘Decade of Disasters'

Xiaomi 17 Max launching soon: 8,000mAh battery, 200MP Leica camera; expected specs revealed

Pune Khadakwasla Accident: Speeding Car Rams Vehicles, 4-Year-Old Boy Killed in Crash

NEET 2026 Paper Leak Case: Who Is Manisha Mandhare? Pune Teacher Arrested Over Biology Paper Leak

SCROLL FOR NEXT