Oracle announced Fusion Agentic Applications on April 9, a suite of 22 AI-powered autonomous agents embedded directly into its Fusion Cloud Applications. The agents span finance, supply chain, HR, and customer experience, and are designed to reason, decide, and execute transactions using enterprise data without human intervention.

22 Agents, Four Domains

The suite includes 12 applications for finance and supply chain (autonomous invoicing, procurement matching, working capital optimization) and eight for HR, including a Career Advancement Command Center, Manager Concierge Workspace, and Workforce Operations Command Center. Additional agents handle sales, service, and marketing workflows in the CX category, according to AI Daily News.

“Finance and supply chain teams are under constant pressure to close faster, respond to disruptions sooner, and deliver more with the same resources, but this is extremely difficult when so much time is still tied up in manual follow-ups, handoffs, and moving work across systems,” Steve Miranda, Oracle’s executive vice president of Applications Development, said in the announcement.

No-Code Agent Builder

Central to the suite is the Agentic Applications Builder within Oracle AI Agent Studio, a no-code platform that lets organizations build, connect, and run agentic applications using reusable Oracle, partner, and external agents. The builder supports workflow orchestration, contextual memory, and content intelligence, enabling enterprises to scale agent deployments without custom development, according to CXOToday.

Built-in observability, ROI measurement, and safety controls are included to track agent performance and enforce operational guardrails.

Native Execution vs. Copilot Overlays

Oracle is drawing a deliberate distinction between its approach and competitors’ copilot-style assistants. The Fusion agents execute directly within ERP, HCM, and CX transactional systems rather than sitting alongside them as advisory overlays. They operate inside the existing Oracle Fusion Applications security framework, autonomously progressing routine work within established guardrails while surfacing exceptions and decisions that require human judgment, per CXOToday.

AI Daily News noted that Oracle differentiates against Microsoft Copilot for Dynamics 365 (assistive copilots), SAP Joule (conversational AI), and Workday AI Agents (primarily HCM-focused) on the basis of full transactional autonomy and breadth of coverage.

The Enterprise Agent Race

Oracle’s 22-agent launch is the largest single batch of embedded enterprise agents announced by a major SaaS vendor to date. The timing places it alongside Anthropic’s Claude Managed Agents (launched April 8), AWS DevOps and Security Agents (general availability April 10), and Microsoft’s new Agent Framework (open-sourced April 11), each approaching the enterprise agent market from different angles.

For Oracle’s 12,000+ Fusion Cloud customers, the question shifts from whether agents will handle their workflows to how quickly they can trust autonomous systems to execute invoicing, procurement, and hiring decisions without human review on every transaction.