Xerox, once a titan of innovation and workplace technology, is now a cautionary tale of corporate decline. The company’s recent Q2 2025 earnings report paints a grim picture: widening losses, shrinking revenue, and a stock price hovering near its 52-week low. Despite bold claims of transformation and reinvention, the numbers tell a different story.
Financial Freefall
- Q2 2025 revenue dropped to $1.58 billion, with adjusted earnings per share plunging to –$0.64, down from +$0.29 a year ago.
- Free cash flow turned negative, and operating margins shrank significantly.
- The company’s bond rating is now junk status (BB–), signaling serious financial instability.
Strategic Confusion
Xerox’s acquisition of Lexmark was supposed to be a game-changer. Instead, it added over $1 billion in debt to a company worth less than $700 million. The promised synergies remain largely theoretical, and internal chatter suggests the integration is chaotic at best.
The recent deal with Kyocera to rebrand their inkjet presses under the Xerox name is another sign of desperation. Xerox scrapped its own production inkjet efforts only to badge-engineer someone else’s technology. This isn’t innovation, it’s survival mode.
Toxic Culture & Layoff Anxiety
Employee forums are flooded with frustration and fear. Layoffs are expected to continue, and morale is at rock bottom. Executives are accused of enriching themselves while the rank-and-file brace for cuts. The culture has devolved into a “wealth transfer machine,” benefiting a select few at the expense of thousands.
Should You Work at Xerox?
No. The company is unstable, the leadership is disconnected, and the future is murky. If you're already working there, it's time to prepare your resume and explore other opportunities. The signs are clear: Xerox is not a place for long-term growth or job security.