Oracle’s new CFO isn’t a software person. She’s an infrastructure person — and that’s exactly the point.
Oracle Corporation, ORCL
The company announced Monday that Hilary Maxson will take over as chief financial officer effective immediately. Maxson most recently served as executive vice president and group CFO at Schneider Electric, and before that spent 12 years at global power provider AES Corp across finance, strategy, and M&A.
That background isn’t accidental. Oracle is in the middle of a major pivot away from its software roots toward building physical AI data center infrastructure through its Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) business.
The company has projected capital expenditures of around $50 billion for fiscal 2026 — a number that has rattled some investors. Oracle stock has dropped 25% this year and is down nearly 50% over the past six months.
Maxson steps into the role reporting directly to CEO Clay Magouyrk, taking over from Doug Kehring, who had served as principal financial officer for six months and is now returning to an operational role.
KeyBanc analyst Jackson Ader said Maxson’s energy and equipment background “puts her ahead of the curve on where Oracle’s business is headed.” The firm kept its Overweight rating and $300 price target.
Mizuho analyst Siti Panigrahi described the hire as a positive, noting her experience scaling capital-intensive businesses fits Oracle’s current trajectory. Mizuho kept its Outperform rating and $320 price target.
Citi analyst Tyler Radke called it “a CFO announcement built for capex,” pointing out that Schneider Electric also went through a major strategic shift while Maxson was in the finance chair there. Citi also holds a Buy-equivalent rating with a $320 target.
Maxson brings over two decades of experience across industrial, infrastructure, and software businesses — a mix that aligns with what Oracle is trying to become rather than what it has been.
Mizuho says investors are most focused on three things right now: OCI expansion, disciplined capital spending, and the conversion of Oracle’s $553 billion order backlog into revenue.
The backlog number is eye-catching. Whether Oracle can execute on it — and whether Maxson can manage the spending required to do so — is the central question heading into the back half of fiscal 2026.
Notably, Oracle’s announcement did not include any changes to existing financial targets. Sixteen analysts have revised earnings estimates upward for the upcoming period, according to InvestingPro.
Oracle also recently launched an AI Data Platform aimed at U.S. federal agencies and added its Cloud Federal Financials solution to the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Financial Management Quality Service Management Office Marketplace — the first cloud-native offering on that platform.
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