Oracle Names Hilary Maxson as CFO to Lead $50 Billion AI Data Center Initiative

Oracle Names Hilary Maxson as CFO to Lead $50 Billion AI Data Center Initiative

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In short: Oracle has appointed Hilary Maxson, former executive vice president and group chief financial officer at Schneider Electric, as its new chief financial officer, effective 6 April 2026. Maxson reports to chief executive Clay Magouyrk and takes on the role at a moment when Oracle is committing $50 billion in capital expenditure for its current fiscal year, has laid off up to 30,000 employees, and operates as a central partner in the Stargate AI data centre joint venture with OpenAI and SoftBank.

A CFO role reinstated after a decade

For more than a decade, Oracle concentrated financial oversight at the very top of its leadership structure. Safra Catz, who became chief executive in 2014, simultaneously held the title of principal financial officer, combining roles that most companies of Oracle’s scale separate. That changed in September 2025, when Catz was appointed executive vice chair of Oracle’s board of directors and Clay Magouyrk and Mike Sicilia were named co-chief executives. The transition left Oracle’s global finance organisation without a dedicated leader, a gap that Doug Kehring, previously head of go-to-market operations, stepped into on an interim basis. Maxson’s appointment formalises the position after a six-month interregnum, with Kehring now returning to his focus on Oracle’s commercial operations.

Magouyrk described the appointment in terms that underscored Oracle’s capital-intensive priorities: “We are pleased that we found a financial leader that matches our culture of strong financial and operational discipline and has experience scaling capital intensive global organizations. Hilary’s experience spans industrial, infrastructure, and software businesses — sectors where capital intensity and execution excellence are critical to success.”

The Schneider Electric connection

Maxson, 48, spent close to nine years at Schneider Electric, the French energy management and automation company with annual revenue exceeding $45 billion. She joined in 2017 as group chief financial officer and oversaw a period in which Schneider transformed from a traditional electrical equipment manufacturer into a digital energy technology company, building software and AI platforms for utilities and data centres. That industrial-to-digital transition, which involved managing large capital cycles, complex global operations, and long-duration infrastructure investment, is directly analogous to the shift Oracle is now undertaking as it pivots from enterprise software to AI cloud infrastructure at scale. Before Schneider Electric, Maxson spent 12 years at AES Corporation, a global power company, in senior roles spanning finance, strategy, and mergers and acquisitions. She currently serves as a non-executive director at mining group Anglo American.

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Maxson will receive an annual base salary of $950,000, according to an SEC filing, with a performance-based bonus targeted at $2.5 million. In her own statement, she set out a framing that emphasised financial discipline alongside growth: “Oracle has built extraordinary momentum at the intersection of cloud, AI, and industry applications. I’m excited to join at this pivotal moment, and I look forward to partnering with Clay, Mike, and the broader leadership team to continue to invest with discipline and to translate this momentum into durable, long-term value for customers and shareholders.”

The scale of the task

Oracle has guided for $50 billion in capital expenditure for its fiscal year ending May 2026, more than double its spend in the prior year. The primary driver is the build-out of cloud data centre capacity to meet what Oracle describes as demand for AI training and inference that currently exceeds its supply. Oracle began

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