Oracle Corporation has named Hilary Maxson as its new Chief Financial Officer, effective April 6, 2026. The stock traded choppy on the news, reflecting a wait-and-see mood from investors.
Oracle Corporation, ORCL
Maxson will report directly to CEO Clay Magouyrk and take charge of Oracle’s global finance organization. It’s a big seat to fill at a company that’s been accelerating fast.
She comes from Schneider Electric, where she held the title of Executive Vice President and Group CFO. Schneider pulls in more than $45 billion in annual revenue, so Maxson isn’t new to managing finances at scale.
Before Schneider, she spent 12 years at AES Corporation in senior roles spanning finance, strategy, and M&A. She holds both a bachelor’s degree and an MBA from Cornell University.
Maxson also serves as a non-executive director and Chair of the Audit Committee at Anglo American plc, adding another layer to her governance credentials.
The timing of the hire matters. Oracle is currently seeing demand for cloud infrastructure outpace available capacity, driven by AI training and inferencing workloads, multicloud database services, and cloud applications.
The company has been moving fast to expand data centers and infrastructure to keep up. Bringing in an experienced CFO with an industrial and infrastructure background fits that build-out phase.
Oracle’s most recent quarter posted revenue growth exceeding 20% on an organic basis. Non-GAAP earnings per share also grew more than 20%, marking the company’s strongest quarterly performance in over 15 years.
Doug Kehring, who had been serving as Oracle’s Principal Financial Officer for the past six months during the transition, will step down from that role.
Kehring isn’t leaving the company. He’ll shift his focus back to optimizing and accelerating Oracle’s go-to-market operations, which is where he spent time before stepping into the interim finance role.
The transition appears orderly, with no indication of any abrupt departures or unresolved gaps in leadership.
Oracle has not provided updated guidance or financial commentary alongside the CFO announcement. The stock’s muted, mixed reaction on Monday suggests the market is treating this as a management housekeeping move rather than a major catalyst.
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