Xerox’s problem is brutally simple: more cash goes out than comes in. Every quarter.
The business isn’t generating enough cash to cover interest, restructuring, and working capital.
Why? Because Xerox is burning cash from operations. Not investing cash. Burning it.
To plug the gap, they’re selling patents and borrowing money using what’s left of their Intellectual Property as collateral, basically pawning the family silver to pay this month’s bills.
At the current pace, they’ve got maybe 6–9 months of runway if they keep pulling levers like asset sales and emergency loans; without those, it’s closer to 2–3 quarters.
Seeking a $500M IP-backed loan means unsecured financing is effectively closed (credit rating at CCC+ = markets price in a real risk of default).
This does NOT fix the business, it just buys time.
If cash doesn’t turn positive fast (not “less negative,” but actually positive), the only realistic outcomes are:
#1 More asset sales (DocuShare, XMPie, CareAR, etc)
#2 Forced recapitalization (debt converts to equity, shareholders wiped)
#3 Chapter 11 (court-supervised version of #2)
Everything else you hear is just nicer words around that math.
The endgame is no longer theoretical, it’s just a matter of timing.
https://www.investing.com/news/stock-market-news/xerox-seeks-500-million-ipbacked-loan-to-boost-liquidity--wsj-93CH-4408966