Oracle is updating its Fusion suite of cloud software — used by large companies to manage finance, procurement, and supply chains — to work with AI agents that can handle tasks on behalf of human users.
Oracle Corporation, ORCL
The changes were announced at an event in London on Tuesday. Oracle says the goal is to let employees ask business questions in plain language and have AI figure out where the data lives and what to do with it.
Steve Miranda, Oracle’s executive vice president of applications development, said the update is designed to free workers from manual, low-value tasks like entering invoices and purchase orders.
Under the updated system, AI agents will take on data entry, data gathering, and making recommendations. Human workers, Miranda said, will shift toward tasks that require judgment — like negotiating with suppliers or weighing a company’s risk tolerance for supply chain disruption.
Oracle stock closed at $154.34 on March 23, up $4.66 or 3.11% on the day. Part of that gain was attributed to easing Middle East tensions and a broader bounce in cloud names.
The stock opened at $154.26 on Tuesday and has a 52-week range of $118.86 to $345.72. Its 50-day moving average sits at $160.75, well below the 200-day moving average of $214.72.
On the analyst side, the picture is mixed. Mizuho called Oracle’s most recent quarter “clean” and kept an Outperform rating, but trimmed its price target from $400 to $320. Deutsche Bank cut its target from $375 to $300 while keeping a Buy rating. Guggenheim held firm at a $400 target with a Buy.
The average analyst target currently stands at $265.77, with 27 Buy ratings, 9 Holds, and 1 Sell.
Oracle reported Q3 2026 earnings on March 10, posting EPS of $1.79, beating estimates of $1.71. Revenue came in at $17.19 billion, up 21.7% year-over-year, and above the $16.91 billion consensus.
The company guided Q4 2026 EPS to a range of $1.96 to $2.00.
On the legal front, multiple law firms have filed or are soliciting plaintiffs for securities class actions covering the period from June 12 to December 16, 2025. The Schall Law Firm also announced a separate investigation into Oracle’s senior notes offering. An April 6 lead-plaintiff deadline has been flagged by at least one firm.
Institutional investors own 42.44% of the stock. Clear Trail Advisors recently opened a new position valued at approximately $648,000.
The company will pay a quarterly dividend of $0.50 per share on April 24, with an April 9 record date. That works out to an annualized $2.00 and a yield of around 1.3%.
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