$3.19-0.12 (-3.47%)
Xerox Holdings Corporation, together with its subsidiaries, operates as a workplace technology company that integrates hardware, services, and software for enterprises in North America, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, India, and internationally.
Xerox Holdings Corporation in the Industrials sector is trading at $3.19 with a market capitalization of $445M. Wall Street consensus targets $2.75 (2 analysts), implying a -13.9% move over the next 12 months. The stock is currently 53% below its 52-week high of $6.80, remaining 26.3% above its 200-day moving average. On fundamentals, Piotroski 3/9 flags weak fundamentals, Altman Z in the distress zone. The Whystock Score of 40/100 suggests a balanced risk-reward profile.
| Metric (USD) | Q1 2026 | Q4 2025 | Q3 2025 | Q2 2025 | Q1 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Revenue | $1.85Bβ | $2.03Bβ | $1.96Bβ | $1.58Bβ | $1.46B |
| Gross Profit | $549.00Mβ | $579.00Mβ | $445.00Mβ | $451.00Mβ | $426.00M |
| Operating Income | $25.00Mβ | $54.00Mβ | -$136.00Mβ | $30.00Mβ | -$4.00M |
| Net Income | -$105.00Mβ | -$73.00Mβ | -$760.00Mβ | -$106.00Mβ | -$90.00M |
Xerox Holdings Corporation, together with its subsidiaries, operates as a workplace technology company that integrates hardware, services, and software for enterprises in North America, Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, India, and inter...
HP, Intel, and Xerox all built the hardware world we grew up in, but the market now prices them as if they belong to different centuries. History offers a precise template for which kind of struggling giant survives long enough to matter again, and only one of these three fits it.
Xerox stock skyrocketed 150 times from 1958 to 1972. It dramatically led two economic cycles and created 50,000-plus jobs.
Unprofitable companies face headwinds as they struggle to keep operating expenses under control. Some may be investing heavily, but the majority fail to convert spending into sustainable growth.
Small-cap stocks can be incredibly lucrative investments because their lack of analyst coverage leads to frequent mispricings. However, these businesses (and their stock prices) often stay small because their subscale operations make it harder to expand their competitive moats.
Shares of document technology company Xerox (NASDAQ:XRX) fell 3.4% in the morning session after the May jobs report showed a much larger-than-expected increase in payrolls, fueling concerns that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates elevated for a longer period.