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The post-earnings sell-off in Oracle (ORCL) is overdone and a clear-cut buying opportunity, Jim Cramer said Tuesday. Still, Oracle delivered robust growth in cloud-computing services, making the stock's slide Tuesday "one of the greatest overreactions I've ever seen," according to Jim. We recognize the challenges facing other parts of Oracle's business, including Cerner and some of its traditional business software offerings. This mix enables us to view Tuesday's stock decline as another entry point, rather than a reason to walk out the door. As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade.
Persons: Jim Cramer, Jim, we've, Cerner, Safra Catz, hasn't, Jim Cramer's, Brendan Mcdermid Organizations: Oracle, Club, Trust, CNBC, UBS, Barclays, Management, Oracle Corporation, New York Stock Exchange Locations: New York City, U.S
Oracle laid off hundreds of employees in its health unit on Thursday, insiders said. Oracle Health includes health IT giant Cerner, which it acquired last year for about $28 billion. Cerner is Larry Ellison's primary focus as he bets on it to prove Oracle's cloud to the world. Oracle on Thursday laid off hundreds of employees, rescinded job offers, and cut back open positions within its health unit, three people familiar with the matter told Insider. Oracle Health includes health IT giant Cerner, which it acquired last year for about $28 billion.
Persons: Oracle, Larry Ellison's, Cerner's, Cerner, Larry Ellison, Ashley Stewart, Blake Dodge Organizations: Oracle Health, Oracle, US Department of Veterans Affairs
June 15 (Reuters) - Software firm Oracle (ORCL.N) on Thursday laid off hundreds of employees, rescinded job offers and cut back open positions within its health unit, the Insider reported, citing three people familiar with the matter. The layoffs follow thousands of cuts in corporate America as companies wrestle with elevated levels of inflation and rising interest rates. Oracle's health unit includes electronic medical records firm Cerner which it acquired for $28.3 billion, its biggest ever deal, in December last year. The layoffs were largely due to Cerner's challenged work with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, which hired Cerner to replace its homemade medical records with Cerner's technology, the report said. Reporting by Kannaki Deka and Samrhitha Arunasalam in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju SamuelOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Cerner's, Cerner, Kannaki Deka, Maju Samuel Organizations: Software, Oracle, U.S . Department of Veterans Affairs, Thomson Locations: America, Bengaluru
After the acquisition closed in June, Oracle has laid off more than 3,000 of the 28,000 original Cerner employees, one of the people said. According to his LinkedIn, Feinberg left the CEO role in September before becoming "chairman" of Oracle Health. After Johnson left, Oracle moved data and artificial-intelligence back under its cloud business. Internally, the face of the unit appears to be Oracle Health General Manager Travis Dalton, who has been in charge of all-hands meetings. Oracle Health is in charge of a contract worth several billion dollars to overhaul the US Department of Veterans Affairs' information systems.
She said that next year, a tech giant will buy an electronic medical records company. Missy Krasner, who oversaw several health efforts at Google and Amazon, predicts that a large technology firm will buy a mountain of patient medical records in 2023. EHR companies provide software that doctors use to store and analyze medical records and other kinds of patient data. The timing is right for big tech to make a play for patient dataThe timing may be right for a big tech company to buy its way into owning patient data. Tech companies have made seismic investments in this area.
The database giant's overall revenue grew 18% in the quarter from the same period last year, and its cloud revenue grew 45% to $3.6 billion. That's including the contributions of Cerner, the medical-records company Oracle bought for $28 billion in a big bet on the healthcare market. But it still lags far behind Amazon, Microsoft, and Google in cloud market share, which means it can't afford to stop investing in its cloud platform. The capability allows Amazon Web Services customers to use Oracle's database without leaving AWS. Sources said Oracle's cloud group was virtually unaffected by the cuts.
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