Oracle launches Fusion Agentic Apps
Oracle unveiled Fusion Agentic Applications, positioning AI to produce business outcomes rather than just generate content. The announcement is framed as a push to embed AI into enterprise workflows and outcome tracking. (x.com)
Oracle said on March 24 that it is launching Fusion Agentic Applications, a new layer inside its Fusion Cloud software that can take actions inside business workflows, not just draft text. (oracle.com) Oracle described the products as teams of specialized artificial intelligence agents built into Oracle Fusion Cloud Applications, with access to enterprise data, approvals, policies, permissions, and transaction records. Oracle said that setup lets the software make and execute decisions in real time inside finance, human resources, supply chain, and customer work. (oracle.com) The rollout came in stages at Oracle AI World events: the company announced the broader platform in London on March 24, then added separate launches for finance and supply chain, human resources, and customer experience in New York on April 9. Oracle listed eight new human resources applications, five for customer experience, and additional finance and supply chain tools in those April 9 releases. (oracle.com, oracle.com, oracle.com, oracle.com) The basic idea is simple: a chatbot writes an answer, while an agentic application is meant to complete a task inside the system that already runs payroll, purchasing, contracts, or inventory. Oracle said its applications are “native to the transactional system,” which means they run inside the software where the records and controls already live. (oracle.com) That pitch lands as large software vendors try to move artificial intelligence from assistant features to automation tied to measurable business results. Oracle has been adding embedded artificial intelligence agents across Fusion for months, including a set of new agents announced in October 2025 and more additions in the 26A product roadmaps published in February 2026. (oracle.com, blogs.oracle.com) Oracle is also expanding the tooling around those applications. On March 24, the company said it updated Oracle AI Agent Studio for Fusion Applications with an Agentic Applications Builder and workflow tools aimed at helping customers build, connect, run, and measure their own automations. (oracle.com) The first named use cases are tightly tied to back-office work. Oracle’s April 9 releases highlighted tools for contract compliance in customer experience, career advancement in human resources, and finance and supply chain processes that Oracle said are designed to free up time and capacity inside existing operations. (oracle.com, oracle.com, oracle.com) Independent coverage has framed the launch as a test of whether enterprises will buy packaged “outcomes” instead of general-purpose assistants. Diginomica reported Oracle recently announced 22 new agentic applications and tied the strategy to customer pressure for business value rather than more artificial intelligence demos. (diginomica.com) Oracle’s bet is that companies will trust automation more when it sits inside the software that already controls approvals, records, and compliance. The launch turns that argument into a product line customers can start buying now. (oracle.com)