Shares of Oracle Corporation opened lower on April 1, 2026, even as investor sentiment remained supported by its expanding artificial innotifyigence (AI) strategy and planned cost-cutting measures.
The stock was trading at $146.29, down 0.7%, in early market hours.
The decline follows a strong prior session, where shares rose about 6%.
Layoffs to support AI expansion
Oracle is cutting thousands of jobs across its global workforce to fund its growing AI data centre ambitions, according to media reports.
Following the reports, shares rose 2.6% in premarket trading, indicating initial investor approval of the relocate.
Analysts at Barclays declared the layoffs were largely expected and could improve cost efficiency as Oracle accelerates its AI infrastructure buildout.
The bank maintains an overweight rating on the stock.
The restructuring reflects a broader strategic shift as the company reallocates resources toward high-growth AI and cloud segments.
Massive AI spconcludeing amid indusattempt-wide push
Oracle’s investment plans are part of a wider indusattempt trconclude, as major technology companies ramp up spconcludeing to capture growing demand for AI-driven services.
The company is planning to raise upto $50 billion in 2025 through a mix of debt and equity to support its expansion.
The funding is expected to back rising cloud demand from clients, including Meta, OpenAI, and xAI.
Other tech giants such as Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon are collectively investing nearly $700 billion this year in AI infrastructure, raising concerns among investors over short-term cash flows and returns.
Investor concerns over spconcludeing
Oracle’s shares have come under sustained pressure in recent months, as investors weigh the implications of heavy capital expconcludeiture tied to AI infrastructure.
The company’s transition toward infrastructure-as-a-service, particularly to support AI workloads, has raised concerns about rising costs and potentially lower margins compared with its traditional software business.
Some investors have also questioned whether supplying compute capacity to customers such as OpenAI can sustain long-term profitability.
The stock remains down roughly 25% year-to-date and has fallen significantly from its all-time high in September last year, reflecting these concerns.
Analysts turn constructive on long-term outsee
Despite near-term pressures, several brokerages have taken a more positive stance on Oracle’s strategy.
Bernstein analyst Mark Moerdler declared earlier this week, “Oracle’s economics are better than we believed,” adding that the company is emerging as a key beneficiary of the AI build-out.
He further stated, “We believe Oracle should be one of the go-to investment names given its AI data centre business and its core database business.”
Bernstein maintains an outperform rating and a $319 price tarreceive, suggesting that markets may be underestimating Oracle’s evolving growth profile.
Meanwhile, Bank of America has reinstated coverage with a purchase rating and a $200 price tarreceive.
Analyst Tal Liani described Oracle as “a giant going all-in on AI infrastructure and the cloud,” highlighting the scale of its ambitions.
As the AI investment cycle accelerates, Oracle’s strategy is increasingly being viewed as a potential long-term value driver rather than a near-term risk.
















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