Oracle reported third-quarter fiscal 2026 results this week, and for HR leaders watching from the sidelines, the numbers carried some reassurance from the product side.
Fusion HCM grew 15% in constant currency during the quarter, one of the stronger performers in Oracle’s application suite. Overall cloud applications revenue reached an annualized run rate of $16.1 billion. Despite rumblings from the media based on a research note from investment bank TD Cowen, Oracle execs did not confirm any workforce reductions on the call.
HCM wins span industries
Several of Oracle’s named HCM wins this quarter came across a range of sectors, including health systems, higher education, public schools, insurance and global financial services. According to Oracle, many were multi-pillar deals bundling HCM alongside ERP and financial planning products, suggesting customers are consolidating on Oracle’s full suite rather than selecting HCM in isolation.
Oracle CEO Mike Cecilia pushed back on what he called the “SaaS apocalypse” theory, the idea that AI-native start-ups will displace enterprise platforms. He argued that Oracle is using AI internally to build and ship faster, while its combination of ERP, HCM, industry suites and infrastructure is not easily replicated by point solutions. AI coding tools “would be a threat if we weren’t adopting them, but we are, and very rapidly,” said Cecilia.
Read more | Oracle’s AI infrastructure bet: Reading between the lines for HR
AI agents inside HCM are already live
Cecilia said Oracle has “delivered well over 1,000 agents right inside our horizontal back office and industry applications,” including HCM, at no additional cost to existing customers. Sharing examples, execs pointed out that Emirates Health Services went live with Fusion HCM this quarter, describing the implementation as enabling a full HR, payroll and talent suite for workforce management.
In healthcare specifically, Oracle pointed to HCM use cases that include nurse training workflows, clinician scheduling and matching the right providers to specific procedures. Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison, speaking during Q&A, framed this as a model for what AI-embedded HR tech looks like in practice across complex organizations.
The infrastructure trade-off
The capital story has not gone away. Oracle raised $30 billion through bonds and convertible preferred stock in February and has committed roughly $50 billion in capital expenditures for fiscal 2026. CFO Doug Caring noted that remaining performance obligations now stand at $553 billion, with AI infrastructure contracts as the primary driver.
For HR leaders evaluating Oracle as a vendor, the earnings call offered product momentum but no direct response to the workforce reduction reports. Oracle’s HCM growth numbers suggest active investment in the product continues. Whether that holds as the infrastructure buildout scales is the question analysts and HR buyers alike are still watching.
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