Stocks/XRX

XRX

Xerox Holdings Corporation
Industrials·Business Equipment & Supplies
$3.24
$424M market cap
Claude Rating
2/10SHORT
Revenue
$7.4B
Free Cash Flow
$246.0M
Rev Growth
+26.7%
FCF Margin
3.3%
P/FCF
1.7x
EV/FCF
17.3x
Fwd EV/EBITDA
6.7x
Fair Value
$1.80
Upside
-44.4%

Xerox Holdings Corporation, a workplace technology company, designs, develops, and sells document management systems and solutions in the United States, Europe, Canada, and internationally. It offers workplace solutions, including desktop monochrome, and color and multifunction printers; digital printing presses and light production devices, and solutions; and digital services that leverage workflow automation, personalization and communication software, content management solutions, and digitiz

2-Year Price History

$2.90-77.1%
$2.0$4.0$6.0$8.0$10$12volJun 24Oct 24Jan 25May 25Sep 25Jan 26May 26

Quarterly Financials & Projections

Quarterly Waterfall ($ M)
PeriodRevEBITDAOpInNIOCFFCFCapExCashDebtSharesROICIntCovEV/EBITDA
Est2028-Q11,740139.2---52.2---87.0-20.91,202----------
Est2027-Q41,950214.5--9.8--292.5-21.51,289----------
Est2027-Q31,860176.7---27.9--111.6-20.5996.1----------
Est2027-Q21,830155.6---45.8--18.3-22.0884.5----------
Est2027-Q11,790125.3---71.6---107.4-21.5866.2----------
Est2026-Q42,010201.0---10.1--281.4-22.1973.6----------
Est2026-Q31,920163.2---38.4--96.0-23.0692.2----------
Est2026-Q21,880141.0---65.8---18.8-22.6596.2----------
Act2026-Q11,846125.025.0-105.0-144.0-165.0-21.0615.04,446129.01.5%1.5x--
Act2025-Q42,028-122.044.0-73.0334.0310.0-24.0512.04,247128.03.0%-1.5x--
Act2025-Q31,961-113.0-136.0-760.0159.0131.0-28.0479.04,406125.8-12.3%-1.4x52.1x
Act2025-Q21,57652.030.0-106.0-11.0-30.0-19.0449.04,146125.81.9%0.9x--
Act2025-Q11,45726.0-4.0-90.0-89.0-109.0-20.0336.03,508124.3-0.5%0.8x--
Act2024-Q41,613124.035.0-21.0351.0334.0-17.0576.03,588124.42.5%4.0x--
Act2024-Q31,528-996.070.0-1,205116.0107.0-9.0521.03,448124.35.3%-32.1x--
Act2024-Q21,578115.067.018.0123.0115.0-8.0485.03,482125.66.9%3.7x26.9x
Act2024-Q11,502-65.0-13.0-113.0-79.0-89.0-10.0685.03,790123.9-0.9%-2.5x24.5x
Act2023-Q41,7653.086.0-58.0389.0379.0-10.0519.03,459123.19.9%0.1x10.9x
Act2023-Q31,652141.063.049.0124.0112.0-12.0590.03,799157.15.0%10.1x8.3x
Act2023-Q21,754139.096.0-61.095.088.0-7.0526.03,319157.09.9%11.6x21.8x
Act2023-Q11,715163.0101.071.078.070.0-8.0591.03,279157.89.4%11.6x27.5x
Act2022-Q41,941229.0167.0121.0186.0168.0-18.01,0453,955156.212.7%12.7x152.4x
Act2022-Q31,752-294.066.0-383.0-8.0-18.0-10.0963.03,977155.75.7%-14.0x--
Act2022-Q21,74786.04.0-4.0-85.0-98.0-13.01,1874,122155.20.2%3.7x--
Act2022-Q11,66812.0-14.0-56.066.050.0-16.01,6814,271156.4-0.6%0.4x--
Historical Valuation

Multiples vs the company's own history — cheap or rich relative to itself? Historical fiscal years, then TTM, then forward projections (E). Forward rows hold today's price against projected earnings, so the multiple compresses if the company grows into it.

YearPriceRev GrEBITDA %EBITDAEV/EBITDAEV/FCFP/EP/S
202211.990.5%33152.4×49.3×n/m0.3×
202316.05-3.1%6.5%44610.9×7.5×>999×0.3×
20248.05-9.7%-13.2%-822n/m9.2×n/m0.2×
20252.37+12.9%-2.2%-157n/m14.0×n/m0.1×
TTM3.24+20.0%-0.8%-580.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×
2027E3.24+0.3%0.1%70.0×0.0×0.0×0.0×

EBITDA in reporting-currency $M. Historical multiples use year-end market cap (split-adjusted price history); TTM & forward years use today's.

AI Analysis

LLM Evaluations

Claude2/10SHORTFV: $1.80

Xerox is a classic value trap masquerading as a turnaround. The company carries $4.4B in debt against a $340M equity market cap, operates in a secularly declining print market with 4-9% organic revenue declines, and has negative GAAP profitability. The Lexmark acquisition adds complexity and leverage without solving the fundamental demand problem. While management guides to $250M FCF in 2026, this relies on heavy H2 seasonality, synergy realization, and working capital normalization — all while $1.2B in maturities loom within 18 months. The 26.8% short interest reflects justified skepticism. Even if management executes perfectly, equity holders are last in line behind massive debt claims, and any refinancing will occur at punitive rates given 7x+ leverage. The stock trades at a seemingly cheap 1.4x P/FCF, but this is misleading given the massive enterprise value of $4.2B, seasonal FCF volatility, and the real possibility that equity is worth zero in a downside scenario.

Catalyst Failure to refinance upcoming debt maturities at manageable rates, or a deeper-than-expected organic revenue decline that prevents achieving the $250M FCF target, would expose the equity as worthless. Conversely, a successful debt restructuring or take-private could be a positive catalyst for remaining equity holders.
Risk Liquidity crisis from inability to refinance $1.2B in near-term debt maturities at sustainable rates, given 7x+ leverage and negative GAAP earnings, leading to a restructuring that wipes out equity.
Trend
DETERIORATING
Mgmt
4/10
Quarter
4/10
Exp. Move
-8.0%

Latest Earnings Call

Transcript Summary

Xerox Holdings Corporation reported Q1 2026 results under new CEO Louie Pastor, emphasizing a strategic pivot toward "relentless execution" and cost discipline. Revenue reached $1.85 billion, a 27% reported increase bolstered by the Lexmark acquisition, though pro forma revenue declined 4%. The company saw a turning point in profitability, with adjusted operating margins rising 240 basis points to 3.9%. Leadership identified three core priorities: stabilizing revenue, increasing profitability, and reducing leverage. To address its capital structure, Xerox utilized a $450 million IP joint venture with TPG Angelo Gordon to improve liquidity and opportunistically repurchase debt at a discount. Operational focus remains on a "barbell" strategy in print—targeting entry-level and production segments—and expanding IT Solutions, which saw 32% bookings growth. While facing headwinds from higher memory and oil prices, Xerox benefited from a favorable tariff ruling and reaffirmed its 2026 guidance, including $250 million in free cash flow. Management plans to deliver $250 million to $300 million in incremental savings this year. The company expects significant deleveraging by year-end as integration synergies materialize and seasonal cash flow improves, aiming for a gross leverage reduction to 5.6x EBITDA.

Valuation & Metrics

Market Stats

Price$3.24
Market Cap$424M
Enterprise Value$4.3B
P/S Ratio0.1x
P/FCF1.7x
EV/FCF17.3x
FCF Margin (TTM)3.3%
FCF Yield58.1%
Dividend Yield (TTM)3.1%
Annual Dilution3.7%
CurrencyUSD

TTM Financial Snapshot

Revenue$7.4B
Net Income$-1.0B
Free Cash Flow$246.0M

Revenue Growth (YoY)+26.7%
EBITDA Margin-0.8%
Net Margin-14.1%
FCF Margin3.3%
CapEx % of Revenue1.2%
SBC % of Revenue0.4%
ROIC-1.5%
WC Change % Rev-1.0%
Interest Coverage-0.2x

DCF Fair Value Estimate

$1.42
-56.1% upside
Fair Enterprise Value$1.8B
− Net Debt$3.8B
= Fair Equity$184M
Revenue Growth-2.9% → 1.0%
FCF Margin3.3% → 4.0%
Discount Rate17.0%
Terminal EV/FCF6.0x

Forward Outlook & Risk

Short Interest

Short % of Float25.9%
Short Shares31.2M
Days to Cover3.8
Change (vs Prior)-2.0%
Short % Float History
25.90%+5.30pp
16.0%18.0%20.0%22.0%24.0%26.0%04-3007-1509-1511-1401-1504-30

Options

Call IV (ATM)113%
Put IV (ATM)123%
ATM Spread1.7%
Call $OI (near money)$1.5M
Put $OI (near money)$2.3M
ATM ExpiryJuly 17, 2026 (56D)
ATM Strike$3.0
Major Expirations3
Near-money chain · July 17, 2026
StrikeCall Bid/AskCall OIPut Bid/AskPut OI
$1.00$1.35/$2.3549--/$0.1019,176
$1.50$0.95/$1.95184$0.05/$0.20349
$2.00$1.00/$1.501,389$0.10/$0.201,209
$2.00$0.50/$2.7089$0.10/$0.75470
$3.00$0.45/$0.505,419$0.50/$0.70309
$3.00$0.05/$0.75560$0.35/$1.05319
$4.00$0.20/$0.253,228$1.25/$1.4010
$4.00--/$0.601,027$1.10/$1.8534
Snapshot: 2026-05-22

Forward Projections & Estimates

NTM Revenue Growth+2.6%
Forward FCF Margin3.3%
Forward EBITDA Margin8.3%
Forward P/FCF1.7x
Forward EV/FCF16.9x
Forward Int. Coverage2.0x
Model Risk Score9/10
Bankruptcy Odds25%
Est. Borrow Rate14.0%
Terminal EV/FCF5.0x
LT Growth-2.0%
LT FCF Margin4.0%

Employees

Headcount17,600
Revenue / Employee$421,080
Gross Profit / Employee$152,216
2022: 20,500 → 2023: 20,100 → 2024: 16,800 → 2025: 22,900 (4% CAGR)

Institutional Ownership

Headline & net flow

NET SELLING

In Q1 2026 so far (quarter still filing), institutions are net sellers — bought 8.4% of float, sold 11.5%. 2 filers moved >1% of shares (1 buying, 1 selling).

Net flow · Q1 2026still filing
-3.1% of float (net)
Bought 8.4% · Sold 11.5%
238 filers reported (last quarter: 275)

Ownership composition

Active
19.7%(-76.0% YoY)
197 filers
hedge / family / endowment
Retail funds
Fidelity, Schwab, 401(k)
Passive
15.0%(-62.4% YoY)
9 filers
Vanguard, iShares, SPDR
Market makers
0.2%(-2.2% YoY)
6 filers
Citadel, Susquehanna
Insiders
5.0%
Form 4 — latest per insider
0%25%50%75%100%2022-062023-032023-122024-092025-062026-03
ActiveRetail fundsPassiveMarket makersRetail direct

Top holders

Fund$ valueCost basisΔ QoQΔ YoYα lifeFund AUM
BlackRock, Inc.Passive$13.1M$9.37+$499K−$11.9M-0.2%$5.69T
VANGUARD PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT LLCPassive$7.9M$1.29+$7.9M+$7.9M$1.91T
STATE STREET CORPPassive$7.7M$7.10+$74K+$428K-0.2%$2.89T
DIMENSIONAL FUND ADVISORS LPPassive$7.5M$12.74−$317K−$2.0M-0.4%$480.92B
TWO SIGMA INVESTMENTS, LP$6.8M$3.79+$3.4M+$6.0M-0.9%$117.03B
VANGUARD CAPITAL MANAGEMENT LLCPassive$6.5M$1.29+$6.5M+$6.5M$4.04T
MARSHALL WACE, LLP$4.8M$6.64+$788K+$1.8M+0.6%$92.71B
CHARLES SCHWAB INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT INC$4.7M$6.03+$181K+$2.0M+0.7%$645.81B
GOLDMAN SACHS GROUP INC$4.4M$4.69−$7.6M+$2.4M-0.2%$760.93B
D. E. Shaw & Co., Inc.$4.2M$4.22−$1.1M+$4.2M-0.3%$118.02B
GEODE CAPITAL MANAGEMENT, LLCPassive$3.8M$8.75+$9K−$14K+2.3%$1.61T
Man Group plc$3.3M$6.57+$1.1M+$1.4M-0.4%$47.62B
Allianz Asset Management GmbH$3.0M$5.65+$295K+$1.2M-0.2%$86.14B
Mitsubishi UFJ Asset Management Co., Ltd.$2.0M$4.98−$32K+$1.3M-0.7%$148.90B
JPMORGAN CHASE & CO$1.8M$8.07+$570K+$825K-0.2%$1.47T
BW Gestao de Investimentos Ltda.$1.5M$1.92+$639K+$1.5M+2.4%$2.25B
NORTHERN TRUST CORPPassive$1.5M$9.88+$129K−$157K-0.2%$755.34B
First Eagle Investment Management, LLC$1.4M$3.09−$1.4M+$1.4M+0.7%$58.96B
Connor, Clark & Lunn Investment Management Ltd.$1.3M$4.92−$253K+$80K+0.6%$43.38B
UBS Group AG$1.3M$7.89+$267K−$8.1M-0.3%$562.11B
Cost basis is a volume-weighted estimate from accumulation periods within our 13F history; holders who built their position before our window started will show a stale basis. % above the cost basis is the unrealized gain at the current price.

Trading behavior

Smart-money alpha (lifetime, %/qtr)BEARISH
Holders
-0.08%
avg per quarter
Holders (ex-self)
-0.08%
excl. this stock
Buyers (this Q)
-1.35%
39 buyers · $0.02B in
Sellers (this Q)
-0.12%
81 sellers · $0.07B out
alpha coverage: 86% of $ has a lifetime-alpha record
Holder behavior on this stocksource: stock
On big dips (−10%+)
-24.7%
how holders react when this stock falls
On quiet Qs
+11.2%
−10% to +10% baseline
On rallies (+10%+)
-20.5%
how they react when this stock rises
Holders' portfolio flow this Q
+7.0%
inflows — adds are organic
Sellers' portfolio flow this Q
+3.7%
Sellers grew AUM elsewhere — opinionated cut of this stock.
▸ Compare to holder-profile behavior (across all their stocks)
Holder dip (any stock)
-5.8%
Holder mid (any stock)
-4.8%
Holder rally (any stock)
-8.2%

Top Holders Over Time

5-year share-count history (top 10 holders by peak, incl. exited) + price

013.4M26.9M40.3M53.8M$1.29$4.98$8.67$12$162021-062022-062023-062024-062025-062026-03
hover the chart for per-quarter detailprice (right axis)
ICAHN CARL CPacer Advisors, Inc.LSV ASSET MANAGEMENT651KBoston PartnersCITADEL ADVISORS LLCNewbrook Capital Advisors LPPoint72 Asset Management, L.P.ARROWSTREET CAPITAL, LIMITED PARTNERSHIPTWO SIGMA ADVISERS, LPBank of New York Mellon Corp383K

Analyst Coverage

Analyst Coverage
Analyst Ratings
2
3
Hold: 2Sell: 3Consensus: Sell
Consensus Estimates
QuarterRevenueEBITDANet IncEPSEPS Range# Analysts
2025 Q32.0B-32M-23M$-0.18$-0.18 – $-0.172
2025 Q42.1B-32M13M$0.10$0.06 – $0.122
2026 Q11.7B-28M-35M$-0.27$-0.37 – $-0.182
2026 Q21.9B-30M-16M$-0.12$-0.19 – $-0.052
2026 Q31.9B-30M5M$0.04$0.02 – $0.072
2026 Q42.0B-31M35M$0.27$0.26 – $0.271
2027 Q11.8B-29M18M$0.14$0.13 – $0.141
2027 Q21.9B-29M21M$0.16$0.16 – $0.161
2027 Q31.9B-29M28M$0.22$0.22 – $0.221
2027 Q41.9B-29M50M$0.39$0.38 – $0.401

Corporate

Insider Trading (last 12mo)

Open-market only (Form 4 P-Purchase + S-Sale). Excludes grants, option exercises, tax withholding, gifts.
Officers & directors
Buys ($, 12mo)
$502K
6 txns · 4 insiders · 117,079 sh
Sells ($, 12mo)
$0
0 txns · 0 insiders · 0 sh
Recent transactions
DateSideInsiderTitleSharesPriceDollarsOwned $
2025-08-01BUYGecaj Mirlandaofficer: CFO5,179$4.03$21K$88K
2025-08-01BUYLetier A. Scottdirector29,600$3.95$117K$233K
2025-05-23BUYBANDROWCZAK STEVEN JOHNdirector, officer: CEO22,300$4.48$100K$1.71M
2025-05-23BUYBRUNO JOHN Gdirector, officer: President and COO25,000$4.38$110K$1.14M
2025-05-23BUYGecaj Mirlandaofficer: CFO10,000$4.41$44K$70K
2025-05-23BUYLetier A. Scottdirector25,000$4.43$111K$130K

Order Flow (FINRA, ~3w lag)

42.5%retail+5.9pp
18.9%dark+2.6pp
week of 2026-04-13
10%20%30%40%24-1125-0225-0525-0825-1126-0226-04retail (non-ATS)dark (ATS)
Off-exchange volume from FINRA. Retail = non-ATS (wholesaler PFOF + broker internalization). Dark = ATS (dark-pool crossing networks, institutional). Lit-exchange = remainder.

Revenue Breakdown

Revenue Segments

By Product (2026-Q1)
Supplies, Paper And Other Sales$437.0M+160%
Service Arrangements$422.0M-2%
Maintenance$417.0M+13%
Manufactured Product, Other$378.0M+33%
I T Solutions Segment$105.0M+0%
Rental And Other$60.0M-14%
Financial Service$27.0M-18%
By Geography (2026-Q1)
UNITED STATES$1.0B+18%
Europe$529.0M+32%
CANADA$126.0M+22%
Latin America$89.0MNEW
Other Geographical Markets$53.0M-48%
Asia Pacific$48.0MNEW

Filing Risk Analysis

Filing Risk Scores

Xerox Holdings Corp: Administrative Metadata Analysis and Structural Integrity Assessment

Overall Risk
2/10
Fraud
1/10
Dilution
1/10
Insolvency
2/10
Earnings Overstated
1/10
Hidden Liabilities
2/10
Legal
1/10
Audit Warnings
1/10
Hidden Upside
1/10
Contextually Acceptable
10/10

Counter-Thesis

Counter-Thesis & Recent News

📰 Recent News

Xerox (XRX) reported a significant Q1 2026 earnings miss on April 30, 2026, with an adjusted EPS loss of $0.43 compared to the $0.27 loss analysts expected. Despite a 27% year-over-year revenue increase to $1.85 billion, this growth was primarily driven by the Lexmark acquisition; on a pro forma basis, revenue actually declined 4%, continuing a streak of organic contraction (Investing.com, May 2026). Leadership also shifted as Louie Pastor took over the CEO role amid a leadership transition and ongoing 'reinvention' initiatives that have yet to restore GAAP profitability (Simply Wall St, May 2026).

🐻 Bear Case

The core bear case centers on 'persistent financial deterioration' and a decade-long decline in the print business. Critics argue the company is using debt-funded acquisitions (like the $1.5 billion Lexmark deal) to mask organic revenue decay, which saw a 9% pro forma drop in Q4 2025 (Seeking Alpha, Jan 2026). With a trailing 12-month net loss of approximately $1.0 billion and a net-debt-to-EBITDA ratio reaching a staggering 8x, the company faces legitimate bankruptcy risks if it cannot refinance looming maturities or reverse its negative free cash flow trend, which stood at -$165 million in Q1 2026 (Finviz, Feb 2026; Stock Titan, April 2026).

🚩 Red Flags

Major red flags include high leverage with $4.4 billion in total debt against just $637 million in cash, and a dividend yield (over 8%) that many analysts view as unsustainable given the negative free cash flow (MarketBeat, April 2026). Furthermore, a class-action lawsuit (Levi & Korsinsky) alleges that Xerox executives misled investors by concealing how massive workforce reductions disrupted sales productivity and delayed critical product launches, leading to revenue misses (Bloomberg Law, Nov 2024; Access Newswire, Jan 2025).

⚔️ Competitive Threats

Xerox operates in a 'commoditized printing market' where it faces aggressive pricing from larger rivals like HP and Canon. The structural shift toward digital workflows and hybrid work models has permanently reduced office paper usage, eroding Xerox's high-margin 'post-sale' (ink and service) revenue, which declined 4% on a pro forma basis in the most recent quarter (Seeking Alpha, Jan 2026; Investing.com, April 2026). Efforts to pivot into IT services put them in direct competition with more agile, tech-native firms where Xerox lacks a clear competitive moat.

💬 Customer Sentiment

Customer demand remains soft, particularly in the legacy print segment, as evidenced by a 5% decline in legacy Xerox equipment revenue (The Motley Fool, May 2026). Sentiment is further dampened by macroeconomic headwinds, including government funding uncertainties and a transition toward paperless 'digital transformation' projects. The pro forma revenue declines of 4-9% over the last two quarters suggest that even with the addition of Lexmark, the combined entity is struggling to retain its share of corporate and public sector spending (ChartMill, Jan 2026).

Full Earnings Call Transcript

Full Earnings Call Transcript — Q1 • 2026-05-01

Operator: Welcome to the Xerox Holdings Corporation First Quarter 2026 Earnings Release Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] At this time, I would like to turn the meeting over to Mr. Greg Stein, Senior Vice President and Head of Investor Relations.
Gregory Stein: Good morning, everyone. I'm Greg Stein, Senior Vice President and Head of Investor Relations at Xerox Holdings Corporation. Welcome to the Xerox Holdings Corporation First Quarter 2026 Earnings Release Conference Call hosted by Louis Pastor, Chief Executive Officer. He is joined by Chuck Butler, Chief Financial Officer. At the request of Xerox Holdings Corporation, today's conference call is being recorded. Other recording and/or rebroadcasting of this call are prohibited without the express permission of Xerox. During this call, Xerox executives will refer to slides that are available on the web at www.xerox.com/investor. We will make comments that contain forward-looking statements, which, by their nature, address matters that are in the future and are uncertain. Actual future financial results may be materially different than those expressed herein. At this time, I'd like to turn the meeting over to Mr. Pastor.
Louie Pastor: Good morning, and thank you for joining our Q1 2026 earnings call. Before we get into the numbers, I want to briefly introduce myself in this new capacity and share my thoughts about the role and how I intend to lead Xerox. First, I want to sincerely thank the Board for the confidence they've placed in me. This is not a responsibility I take lightly. As many of you know, I was appointed President and COO last September. And before that, I served in leadership roles spanning operations, transformation, corporate development and legal. I know this business well. I know our people well, and I have been deeply involved in the work underway to improve our performance, much of which is starting to show up in our results. The Board's decision to name me CEO reflects the progress we've made over the past 2 quarters, including structural cost reductions, early signs of momentum growing our revenue funnel, and the execution of key initiatives to strengthen our balance sheet, like the TPG Angelo Gordon joint venture and the warrant distribution. Separately, my decision to eliminate rather than retain and backfill the President and COO role was deliberate. There are no sacred cows here. The role is not needed anymore, and eliminating it reflects exactly the kind of cost discipline, operational efficiency and speed of execution this moment demands. I intend to lead this company with the same operating discipline I brought to every role I've ever held. Sleeves rolled up, deeply embedded in the work and with a clear-eyed focus on what actually moves the needle. We're aware of our stock price. We're aware of our credit ratings. I'm not going to paper over the challenges that Xerox faces. Rather, I have a disciplined, pragmatic approach to tackling them, and I'm focused on actions, not excuses. To our employees, our clients, our partners and our investors, I commit to being transparent and accountable with all of you. We will talk openly about our successes. We will acknowledge our challenges, and we will move quickly to address them. You deserve that. And frankly, it's the only way we'll make real progress. Let me also be clear about this. I am genuinely optimistic about the future of this business. I know what this organization is capable of, and I'm confident that we are closer to an inflection point than the external narrative suggests. Xerox has real assets, real client relationships and a team that has shown it can execute under pressure. Our strategy is not changing. It doesn't need to. What this company needs and what our leadership intends to deliver is relentless, disciplined execution against the strategy we have already laid out. The plan is in place. Now we run it. So with that, let's talk about our results. Q1 showed a continuation of the improving underlying trends we discussed on our Q4 earnings call. Revenue of $1.85 billion increased nearly 27% in actual currency and 24% in constant currency, reflecting the inorganic benefits of the Lexmark acquisition. On a pro forma basis, revenue declined 4%. Even excluding the benefit of some partner-driven pull forward from Q2, which Chuck will discuss in further detail, Q1 performance was a material improvement from the 9% organic revenue decline we saw in Q4. Quarterly adjusted operating margin increased on a year-over-year basis for the first time in 5 quarters. Adjusted operating margin of 3.9% was up 240 basis points year-over-year on a reported basis and was also up on a pro forma basis. This is a turning point in our profit trajectory, and it reflects the cost discipline our team has maintained through a complex integration. Overall market trends have improved from 2025 when demand was materially impacted by DOGE-related spending reductions, tariff uncertainty, and the government shutdown. In the Print segment, we're seeing steady demand in entry, led by better-than-expected performance at legacy Lexmark, continued softness in midrange and strong demand for our new production devices with Proficio, a recently launched device developed in partnership with Fujifilm, tracking well ahead of plan. Our overall print pipeline is now up meaningfully compared to this time last year, and we expect these trends to persist. I also want to highlight a partnership that speaks directly to the momentum we are building in production. Earlier this month, Toshiba Americas announced the addition of Xerox PrimeLink color and monochrome light production printers to their portfolio. This is a powerful validation, a well-respected global player with deep client relationships choosing to sell Xerox-branded devices through their network speaks to both the strength of our brand and the competitiveness of our production portfolio. We will actively seek to expand our distribution reach by pursuing partnerships like this with other OEMs. Our IT Solutions business delivered another solid quarter. Bookings grew 32%, billings grew 21%, and we delivered year-over-year profit growth. Total contract value of new deals continues to rise, and we are winning more managed services contracts, which provide greater visibility and long-term stability in our revenue trajectory. However, there are certain headwinds constraining that momentum. Memory lead times have extended, and in certain cases, higher memory prices have compressed margins as we prioritize establishing new relationships and expanding wallet share. We are also investing in technical talent to support a broader service offering. We believe these investments will lead to larger, more strategic deals over time, but they may create near-term pressure on IT Solutions profit expansion. As we look to the rest of the year, our positive expectations remain intact, though subject to quarterly timing variability, driven by OEM and inventory availability. A few other developments since our prior earnings call are worth noting. February Supreme Court ruling on tariffs is a net positive to Xerox's cost structure, particularly as it relates to our cross-border supply chain. That said, based on current forecast, those benefits will be slightly more than offset by increased memory prices, which are modestly higher than our last update, as well as higher oil prices, which impact toner, plastic and metal prices as well as transportation costs. Importantly, apart from certain international markets with exposure to the Middle East conflict, none of this to date has impacted overall demand. Given our solid start to the year and the momentum we have generated, we are reaffirming our 2026 financial guidance and are increasingly confident in our ability to meet these commitments. Looking ahead, our priorities are straightforward and every stakeholder should understand where we are focused: stabilize revenue, increase profitability, reduce leverage. That's it. First, stabilize revenue. Rightsizing our cost structure will remain a core focus, but we cannot cost cut our way to prosperity. We operate in a $50 billion print market facing secular headwinds, but there are real pockets of growth, particularly in entry and production. We intend to compete aggressively in those markets with better products, reduced manufacturing costs, stronger routes to market, improved service offerings and new partnerships. And over time, we expect growth in IT solutions and digital services cross-sold into our existing client base to offset print declines. Second, increase profitability. We expect to deliver $250 million to $300 million of incremental savings in 2026, including $150 million to $200 million from the integration of Lexmark. But I want to be clear, this is not a 1-year event. It is a multiyear journey. The cost actions we are taking today will continue to benefit us well into 2027 and beyond. We have guided to double-digit operating margins over time, and we intend to get there. Finally, reduce leverage. I want to address this priority directly because I know it is top of mind for many of you, as it is for us. While the $450 million TPG Angelo Gordon joint venture has increased our overall debt in the near term, it has provided meaningful liquidity to invest in and operate the business as well as the flexibility to take advantage of the dislocation in our bond prices. Between continued opportunistic debt repurchases and improving profitability, we expect our leverage ratios to improve as the year progresses. Reducing leverage is not just a stated priority, it is something you will be able to measure us against every quarter. Before I turn the call over to Chuck, let me take a minute to highlight some key operational initiatives that I believe are fundamental to how Xerox executes against the 3 stated priorities that I went through. Our go-to-market is now fundamentally different. We have moved from a fragmented structure with too much overlap and friction to a unified commercial engine with a simpler strategy, take share, cross-sell, upsell and mix shift toward higher-value offerings. On the enterprise side, we have eliminated account overlap and streamlined engagement. For corporate accounts, we have transitioned to a territory-based model with clear ownership, faster decisions and greater accountability. Our print go-to-market coverage is now structured into 3 regional theaters: North America, Western Europe and Rest of World, each designed around distinct client dynamics, routes to market and partner ecosystems. This simpler, more client-centric approach gives us the ability to meet clients where and how they need us, leverage our expanding global partner community and accelerate growth in targeted segments, all with clear rules of engagement and stronger accountability for both clients and partners. On inside sales, an initiative we launched last year to serve our smaller commercial clients with a greater touch, but at lower cost, equipment sales grew 24% year-over-year in Q1. On April 1, we expanded account coverage from 35,000 to 65,000 clients with revenue accountability quadrupling to more than $200 million. We expect to further scale this model over time. We also continue to take greater ownership of our product design and manufacturing, strengthening our control over quality, cost and speed to market. This will start yielding positive benefits to gross margin later this year. Xerox is becoming and in many respects, already is, a designer, developer, manufacturer, seller and servicer of our own technology. That end-to-end control matters enormously. We own the technology roadmap. We control the design costs. We make the decisions. And frankly, it means we control our own destiny. These initiatives, a transformed go-to-market and greater manufacturing control are central to how we stabilize revenue, increase profitability and ultimately reduce leverage. With that, Chuck, over to you.
Chuck Butler: Thanks, Louis. Good morning, everyone. Louis just laid out our 3 priorities: stabilize revenue, increase profitability, reduce leverage. I'll walk through Q1 against that same frame. On revenue, trajectory improved versus Q4. On profitability, adjusted operating income more than tripled year-over-year. On leverage, we took deliberate concrete actions to strengthen the capital structure and position us to delever from here. We are reaffirming full year guidance with even more confidence today than when we set it. Before we get into the details, a brief note on tariffs. Our Q1 results and guidance do not reflect any potential refund benefits associated with the recent Supreme Court ruling on IEEPA tariffs. We expect additional clarity during the second quarter, and we'll provide an update on our next earnings call. Q1 revenue of $1.85 billion increased 27% year-over-year on a reported basis and 24% in constant currency, reflecting Lexmark's contribution. On a pro forma basis, revenue declined 4% year-over-year, a material improvement from a 9% decline in Q4. As Louis alluded to, Q1 revenue benefited by approximately 1% from the pull-forward of post-sale revenue, primarily in supplies, partly driven by customer and channel concerns around potential supply disruptions related to the conflict in the Middle East. Even adjusting for this benefit, Q1 revenue would have exceeded consensus expectations by approximately $80 million. As we have discussed on our prior calls, 2025 included meaningful headwinds from the exit of certain production print device sales. While their impact is diminishing, they have not fully dissipated. From this point on, we will no longer call these out separately. Our focus is on the trajectory of the business, not noise in prior period comparisons. On a similar note, as Louis mentioned, we have unified our go-to-market organizations. We will make select references to legacy Xerox and Lexmark on today's call where it adds context. But going forward, we will report and speak about the business as one. Turning to profitability. Adjusted gross margin was 30.3%, up 60 basis points year-over-year, driven by Lexmark's contribution and transformation benefits, partially offset by 100 basis points of increased product costs and declines in high-margin finance-related fees, largely a result of our forward flow arrangements, which shifts certain finance income off balance sheet. Adjusted operating margin was 3.9%, up 240 basis points year-over-year, driven by higher gross margins, integration synergies and lower marketing spend. Non-financing interest expense was $84 million, up $51 million year-over-year due mainly to higher net interest expense associated with Lexmark acquisition financing. GAAP loss per share was $0.84, down $0.09 year-over-year and adjusted loss per share was $0.43, $0.37 lower than a year ago, primarily due to higher interest expense and an unusual tax rate, the latter of which I want to address directly. Our non-GAAP adjusted tax rate of negative 219% looks unusual because we carry a valuation allowance against certain deferred tax assets. The practical effect is that pretax losses in the U.S. and U.K., along with disallowed interest expense do not generate a corresponding tax benefit while we continue to record tax expense on profits in certain jurisdictions. It is a GAAP consequence of where we sit today, not a reflection of operating performance or cash. As our profitability improves, we expect the tax rate to normalize and converge with our cash taxes. To put it in context, if we adjust for the impact of valuation allowances in the U.S. and U.K., EPS would have been negative $0.11, ahead of negative $0.27 consensus. We present non-GAAP taxes based on Q1 results, but we believe this is a more normalized lens to view underlying operating performance. Let me review segment results. Within Print and Other, Q1 equipment revenue was $378 million, up 33% as reported or up 31% in constant currency. On a pro forma basis, equipment revenue declined 2%, well ahead of the 10% decline last quarter, driven by stronger year-over-year trends at both legacy Xerox and Lexmark and fewer onetime headwinds. Legacy Xerox equipment revenue fell 5% compared to a 12% decline in Q4. The sequential improvement was driven by improved demand in entry and production. Legacy Lexmark equipment revenue grew 5% versus a 6% decline in Q4 on a higher demand across the enterprise and channel and a slight reduction in backlog. As we have noted previously, Lexmark's equipment revenue tends to be more variable than legacy Xerox, given Lexmark's higher concentration of large channel and OEM partner transactions. Print post-sales revenue was $1.31 billion, up 30% as reported and up 27% in constant currency. On a pro forma basis, print post-sale revenue declined 4%, mainly due to lower financing income and service rental and other declines within legacy Xerox. Print and Other adjusted gross margin was 31.3%, down 10 basis points year-over-year, as higher product cost, lower managed print volumes and lower high-margin finance-related fees were largely offset by transformation savings and Lexmark's contribution. The Print segment margin was 5.1%, up 190 basis points due to Lexmark's contribution, transformation benefits and integration savings. Turning to IT Solutions. Gross billings grew 21% year-over-year. Total bookings, an indication of future billings increased 32%. Both represent sequential improvements from Q4. GAAP revenue fell 5% in the quarter, but that number understates underlying activity. A growing share of what we sell, third-party service contracts, SaaS and certain fulfillment contracts where we act as an agent is reported on a net basis. The widening difference between GAAP and gross billings reflects accounting treatment, not changes in demand. We expect it will begin normalizing later this year and into 2027, though some revenue cycles could run longer. Going forward, gross billings and segment profit are the most useful lenses on this business. This is where you will see its health and trajectory. On profitability, gross profit was $30 million, with gross margin of 19.5%, up 230 basis points year-over-year, driven by changes in revenue mix and synergies, partially offset by higher memory cost. Segment profit was $6 million with profit margin of 3.9%, up 80 basis points year-over-year as higher gross profit was partially offset by investments in the sales and delivery organization and strategic hires. Cross-selling into our existing Xerox Print client base continues to build, with more than $32 million of new pipeline created in Q1. Moving to our cash flow and capital structure. For the quarter, operating cash was a use of $144 million compared to a use of $89 million last year, reflecting the inclusion of Lexmark, lower proceeds from finance receivable sales and working capital timing. Investing activity was a $24 million use of cash, $21 million from CapEx compared to a source of $6 million in the prior year, which included proceeds from asset sales. Financing activity resulted in a $242 million source of cash, reflecting the JV financing, partially offset by the paydown of the remaining IT savvy notes and partial payment of the 2028 senior unsecured notes. Free cash flow was a use of $165 million for the quarter, down $56 million year-over-year and in line with our internal expectations, as Q1 is typically a seasonal use of cash. Said differently, Q1 is our seasonal trough and the back half of the year is where the bulk of our free cash flow is generated. We expect improvements in adjusted operating income, working capital discipline and additional proceeds from finance receivables to deliver substantial free cash flow over the remainder of the year. We ended Q1 with $637 million of cash and cash equivalents, inclusive of $52 million of restricted cash and total debt of $4.4 billion. Approximately $1.4 billion of the outstanding debt supports our finance assets, with remaining core debt of $3 billion attributable to the nonfinancing business. On a pro forma basis, gross leverage was 7x trailing 12 months EBITDA. Our capital allocation priority remains debt reduction, driven by EBITDA growth and continued debt paydown, and we expect leverage to go down significantly as the year progresses. During the quarter, we announced an IP joint venture with TPG Angelo Gordon. This structure raised more than $400 million of liquidity net of fees against our intellectual property. Following the JV agreement, we repurchased $101 million of face value of our 2028 senior unsecured notes for $45 million, capturing $56 million of discount, reducing future cash interest and capturing real value for our shareholders. The result of these actions is a maturity ladder that has been meaningfully derisked in the near term. We have approximately $300 million of scheduled debt maturities between now and December 2027, inclusive of the $125 million of the 13% senior bridge notes that we will be paying at the end of Q2. That is a manageable window, and we will have multiple tools to address it, organic cash flow, continued open market repurchases, the warrant mechanism and capacity within our existing debt structure. We will continue to be opportunistic when market conditions support it. Importantly, we will continue to pressure test every action against one goal. Does it create sustainable long-term value for shareholders? That is the lens. Now, for guidance. For 2026, we still expect greater than $7.5 billion in revenue and expect adjusted operating income to be in the range of $450 million to $500 million, an increase of more than $200 million versus 2025, driven by $150 million to $200 million of in-year integration synergies and $100 million of in-year transformation savings. We expect free cash flow of approximately $250 million. Compared to 3 months ago, our free cash flow guidance is underpinned by higher interest expense resulting from the JV, offset by reductions in CapEx, improvements in working capital and lower cash taxes. The result of our assumptions remain unchanged. Our free cash flow guidance implies greater than $400 million of free cash flow generation for the balance of 2026. As a result, based on our implied guidance, by year-end 2026, we expect gross and net leverage to drop by approximately 1.5x to 5.6x and 4.5x trailing 12 months EBITDA, respectively. With that, I will now turn the call back to the operator to open the line for questions.
Operator: [Operator Instructions] And our first question comes from Ananda Baruah with Loop Capital.
Ananda Baruah: A few, if I could. I guess, Louis, what -- you walked through a lot of great detail there in your prepared remarks. What you spoke about is new? And what might be some of the stuff that you'll be focusing on that could be new that may not have been mentioned in what you talked about? And I have a couple of follow-ups.
Louie Pastor: Yes. Thanks, Ananda. I appreciate the question. I appreciate you joining the call. To be honest, a lot of what I was trying to emphasize was that the strategy actually is already in place and doesn't need to change. What's new, I would say, is perhaps the level of rigor and focus on solely these 3 priorities that we went through. So stabilizing revenue, expanding profitability and reducing leverage. Everything that we do needs to be framed through that lens. And as we do it, it just -- like I said, it just creates the opportunity to drive even greater focus and better execution.
Ananda Baruah: I got it. And a point of clarification, going back to your prepared remarks. You made mention of -- and this is me paraphrasing, focus on entry level and production where you think there's attractive opportunity. What about the midrange? I know you also said midrange remains soft. What's the right way we should, sort of, think about midrange? And when you think about the core, your core enterprise customer, how do they fall across entry and midrange in the way in which you're describing entry and midrange?
Louie Pastor: Yes. So the way we think about the strategy commercially is it's very much and we've talked about this in the past, a gain share mix shift strategy. And when we talk about the mix shift, a lot of people think just about the shift of the mix of our revenues from print in greater amounts into IT solutions and digital services. But there is also a mix shift within print. And that mix shift within print is actually part of the gain share component of the strategy. And that's the barbells that we were just talking about with entry and production. So we are responding to and following the trends in the market, which is why our investments are going into those 2 spaces in entry. Obviously, Lexmark historically has been a leader in the space. Now we're a fully vertically integrated player, controlling design, development, delivery, manufacturing end-to-end in that space, which allows us to compete far more effectively. And on production, we're so well positioned with respect to sales, distribution and service. And with new partnerships, we're bringing new hardware to market, but we're wrapping it around an end-to-end solution. And so part of how we grow and get back to a stable revenue stream in print is through the execution of that barbell strategy. Now the midrange is the most challenged part of the market. We've historically been a leader there. It's still highly profitable for us, and it's still a core component when we do an end-to-end managed print services offering at the enterprise. It's part of the mix of what is ultimately being purchased and delivered and serviced. But ultimately, our focus is going to be on the areas of growth and ensuring that the midrange plays a role where it's relevant and part of a holistic solution. And we'll continue to be in the space, but the focus strategically is going to be far more on entry and production.
Ananda Baruah: That's helpful context. I got one more. You mentioned memory lead times have extended and that may have some sort of profit impact. And I think this is regard to IT savvy specifically. So correct me if that's not accurate. What I -- what we've seen is, some of the distribution folks, distribution vendors have been able to pass the memory cost through, without seeing impact to elasticity yet. So could you just give us a little more context around what it is you're seeing? Are you passing costs through? Are you able to pass costs through to some extent? Are you hitting elasticity points? Is it really a timing -- is it really a timing mechanism? Or to what degree is timing playing a role there as well? Just [ flip ] that for us, that would be great. And that's it for me.
Chuck Butler: Louis, let me start and then maybe you jump in if I missed something here. Memory, it operates in both of our segments, both in the IT Solutions and in the print side of things, but impacts on both a little differently. On IT Solutions, what you'll find is that memory will slow down the buying patterns of some of our customers that we work with. We generally try to get in there and shape their demand to see what they want to spend their available budget on, make sure we keep equal wallet share in those customer bases because we have a broad product portfolio. And sometimes we work with them to say, look, you can extend the life of these hardware products that contain the memory and wait for the prices to come back down. So we try to help them shape that demand going forward. If they want to go ahead and buy, we largely pass that along to the end customer in the IT solutions space. On the print side of things, it can be a significant cost increase on some of the product line. The higher up you move the stack, the more price -- the more cost increase it has. What I will tell you is in our current forecast, we factored in the current macro environment for exactly where it is today, where we think it is today. So all the memory cost increases, what's happening with the fuel offset by the change in the tariff is all factored into our reaffirmation of the 2026 guidance.
Operator: Our next question comes from Samik Chatterjee with JPMorgan.
Unknown Analyst: This is Mark on for Samik. I guess my first question is kind of a follow-up to one of the previous ones for Louis. I guess with regards to some of the initiatives and new strategies that he's going to be -- or approaches that he's taking, I guess, anything to elaborate on in terms of how the approaches might differ from the prior management?
Louie Pastor: No, I don't think we need to go into sort of granular detail around kind of what's changing from the prior leadership to my leadership other than to just emphasize once again kind of the 3 priorities that drive all of our decision-making. So stabilizing revenue, expanding profitability and reducing leverage. So ultimately, everything that we do is framed through that lens. We've talked about the strategy and where we're focused in what segments and how we execute the mix shift. And really, it's just continuing to make sure that everybody at this company is focused and empowered and accountable for delivering those results.
Unknown Analyst: Got it.
Chuck Butler: And if I could just add a little bit. I'll tell you from my seat, one thing you noticed and Louis touched on it there, it's every decision that we make right now is put through the lens of does it stabilize revenue? Does it expand margins? And does it delever this company as quickly as possible? And it's staying incredibly focused on those 3 points.
Unknown Analyst: Got it. I guess on the margin side, there was some improvement in print profit margins quarter-to-quarter. I guess what are some of the drivers in the quarter-to-quarter improvement? And like how much of that would you consider structural versus like onetime benefits?
Chuck Butler: Yes, the benefits that you're seeing as we continue to expand margin are largely related to the acquisition and synergy costs as we continue to realize those.
Unknown Analyst: Got it. And then I guess the last question on top of that would be looking at the path of operating margins from around 4% this quarter to the midpoint of the guidance. I guess, what do you think about in terms of the quarterly cadence? What would be driving the step function changes? Any changes with regards to timing of how you envisioned it earlier this year?
Chuck Butler: Yes, Louis, let me start and feel free to jump in. If you think about the seasonality of how we'll realize the synergy savings, it will expand each quarter-on-quarter successively and then peaking in the fourth quarter. Some of that's really seasonality because the scale of your business increases throughout the year, fourth quarter being the larger quarter in the space for us. And some of it is just the realization of another quarter, realizing full benefits from actions that you've taken. So you'll continue to see it expand each quarter on top of the other.
Operator: Our next question comes from Asiya Merchant with Citigroup.
Asiya Merchant: My question is also related a little bit to seasonality. And if you could just talk a little bit about the 2 segments. How envision sort of revenues seasonality between the 2 segments as you kind of look forward to your -- above $7.5 billion revenues for the year? And if you can also peel a little bit on cash flow here, free cash -- operating cash flow and free cash flow kind of seasonality. I think you guys are obviously expecting a lot more of it in the back half. What's driving that aside from operating income? How should we think about whether it's receivables flowing through or working capital as you progress throughout the year?
Chuck Butler: Yes, I'll start here again. When you look at the seasonality of our revenue, even legacy Lexmark and legacy Xerox acted a little bit differently, but similar. Some of them depend on school cycles, government cycles, some of them depend on your geographic mix and where you operate in. Typically, what you would have seen for Lexmark and Xerox, though broadly, is one is light, two and three are in the middle and four is the biggest revenue month. IT Solutions appears to get its biggest traction in the third quarter. And it's largely driven by schools coming back in session and different buying cycles in the spaces that they play. Operating cash flow in the print space, working capital is a drag in the first quarter typically. And the first quarter tends to be -- it's your lower revenue month, so you don't get as much scale, and it tends to be the most compressed in those spaces. It was the same thing at legacy Lexmark. It was the same thing at legacy Xerox historically. And then the fourth quarter tends to be the best working capital and the highest revenue, so you generate the most cash flow accordingly. And you'll see that in the space. If you look back in '25, more than all the cash flow was driven in the back half of the year. And that's generally what we're going to see here in '26. We'd like to see that a little flatter, and we'll try to find ways to normalize it, so the impacts aren't so pronounced. But it is industry that drives a large piece of that. In addition to that, because of the expanding margins and the trajectory on realizing more synergy savings quarter-on-quarter, that will drive incremental cash flow throughout the year as well. Did I answer your question?
Asiya Merchant: Yes, that's helpful. In terms of your billings and bookings, I know you're reporting pretty strong billings and bookings here in IT solutions. You're also talking about talent hires. Just help me understand like how we should think about those billings and bookings translate into revenues into that segment for the year?
Louie Pastor: Yes. I'll start and then, Chuck, if you want to build on top of it. The way we run this business is with a focus on bookings and billings and then ultimately, how much of that actually pulls through to profit. So revenue is somewhat of a derivative of and a mid-level sort of gauge between those 2. But what we're really focused on is are we growing with our clients? Are we selling more to our clients? And ultimately, of what we sell, are we realizing a profit based on that? And so the trends overall that we're looking at bookings, billings and the flow-through on profit, we continue to see improvement in growth and the pipeline, albeit there are some macro headwinds there around memory and availability. But ultimately, it continues to benefit from secular tailwinds.
Chuck Butler: Yes. The only thing I think I would add to that, a lot of times, gross billings doesn't always translate into revenue recognition on the face of your P&L. That's done based on the mix of customers and the mix of products that you take into that customer base, whether you treat it like an agent relationship or not. But the higher the gross billings go, you have a mind share and a wallet share in those customer bases that's meaningful. And the growth of that is operationally how you judge the health of that business. So we're excited about the growth we're seeing in the gross billing side of things. In terms of hiring talent, yes, we continue to invest in the space because that's the top line of the 3 priorities that Louis mentioned, stabilizing revenue. And we're going to invest in that to make sure it becomes the engine that allows us to achieve that.
Operator: I would now like to turn the call back over to Mr. Pastor for any closing remarks.
Louie Pastor: Thank you. Q1 gave us early proof points that the work we're doing is taking hold, an improving revenue trajectory, expanding margins and a growing pipeline across both print and IT solutions. We have more work to do, and we know it, but the business is moving in the right direction. In the coming months, Chuck and I plan to actively engage with our employees, clients, partners and investors. We will listen, answer questions and take feedback while keeping everyone focused on our 3 priorities: stabilize revenue, increase profitability and reduce leverage. Thank you for your time and for your continued support. We look forward to speaking with many of you in the weeks ahead.
Operator: This concludes the conference. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.