Welcome to the Xerox Holdings Corporation Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Release Conference Call. Hosted by Steven John Bandrowczak, 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. And we'll 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 would like to turn the meeting over to Mr. Bandrowczak. Good morning, and thank you for joining our Q4 2025 earnings conference call. On the Q3 call, I highlighted the macroeconomic challenges we are facing and the continued disruption associated with the tariff and government funding-related uncertainty. Macro headwinds continue to persist, but we are cautiously optimistic that the business trends are starting to improve. Revenue in the quarter of $2.03 billion increased roughly 26% in actual currency and 24% in constant currency. Reflecting the inorganic benefits of the Lexmont and IT Savvy Pro forma for these acquisitions, revenue declined 9%. Adjusted operating income margin of 5% was lower year over year by 140 basis points. Free cash flow was $184 million, a decrease of $150 million versus the prior year. And adjusted loss per share of 10¢ decreased by 46¢ year over year. For the year, revenue of $7.02 billion increased roughly 13% in actual currency, and 12% in constant currency. Excluding the benefits of the acquisitions, revenue declined approximately 8%. Adjusted loss per share of 60¢ was $1.57 lower year over year. We generated $133 million of free cash flow, which was $334 million lower year over year. An adjusted operating income margin of 3.5% was lower year over year by 140 basis points. While macro headwinds continued to weigh on transactional print equipment sales, activity picked up following the end of the government shutdown. In addition, page volume declines moderated and supply usage stabilized. Encouragingly, we enter 2026 with a pipeline higher than this time last year. With cancellations and renewal rates also improved in 2025. This gives us confidence in improving underlying trends in 2026. What does give us pause is the recent spike in DRAM prices, as they began to impact costs across storage, servers, endpoints, and networking equipment. Having the greatest effect on our IT solutions business. Considering this, we are taking steps to mitigate including moving to consumption models such as HPE GreenLake, Dell Apex devices and service models, providing extended maintenance services for clients that decide to retain their old hardware. The impact is expected to be modest in our print business in the first half of the year, but based on current trends, we are expecting a larger impact from the price and availability perspective as we move into the back half of the year. Still, we remain confident in our long-term prospects of our IT solutions business. While revenue was impacted in Q4 due to delays in enterprise deals directly tied to the recent spike in memory prices, the breadth of our business continues to grow. Supported by a very strong quarter in the Velocity channel. Bookings, billings, and backlog all increased and pro forma profits improved meaningfully once again. Aided by the synergies generated throughout the year. IT Solutions is strategically positioned to capture secular growth through differentiated platforms, including our network operating center. Through our NOC, we deliver scalable AI-enabled automation and operational intelligence underpinning our managed infrastructure services through a proprietary AIOps platform. As we look out towards 2026, our conviction for more meaningful margin expansion is high, underpinned by our guidance of more than $200 million improved in adjusted operating income. Many of the headwinds we experienced in 2025, such as tariffs, increased product costs, and the wind-down of the sale of several production lines, begin to moderate as we move through the year. We expect tailwinds in 2026 to steadily grow from the launch of new product offerings, a fully integrated IT solutions organization, and a soon-to-be unified Xerox Lexmark sales organization. We remain focused on the balanced execution of our three strategic priorities. Execute reinvention, realize acquisition benefits, and balance sheet strength. I will provide an update on each. Starting with the execution of reinvention. With each quarter, the progress following the acquisition of Lexmont, I have become increasingly confident in the complementary nature of our businesses. Much of the original nervousness from following the transaction close had dissipated, and most of our clients and partners are excited about what our joint offerings mean for them. We continue to develop our route to market and we'll have more to share next quarter as well as an update on our inside sales strategy. Which we will continue to be meaningfully expanding during the year. Last quarter, we discussed at length our enhanced global business services organization. Which was launched in 2024 to create a more streamlined and comprehensive set of centralized operating processes leading to lower operating costs and improved quality. In addition to the physical changes we noted, such as greater utilization of Lexmont captive offshore and nearshore global capability centers, we are also leveraging our AI capabilities to further drive efficiencies into this organization. To that point, Xerox recently established an AI center of excellence. In 2025, we launched several internal designed to streamline processes, improve customer experience, and strengthen financial performance. These platforms are delivering measurable impact today. We introduced AI-powered service agents across XBS US and Latin America. These agents handle thousands of real customer interactions via chat, and voice leveraging prior service cases, support, engineering content, and large language models to deliver immediate This has resulted in higher success rate reduced waiting times, and improved customer experience all at lower cost per interaction. financial improvements. Beyond service, AI is driving significant Using Microsoft Copilot Studio and advanced data science reduced outstanding accounts receivable, automated over $10 million in credit hold actions, and surfaced actionable insights from 1.4 million collector comments. These capabilities empower faster, data-driven decisions that improve cash flow and operational resilience. Finally, we begin to utilize AI-driven analytics to protect our supplies business. Leveraging problem holistic modeling and machine learning we identified hundreds and thousands of cartridges with potential counterfeit and third-party activity, strengthening supply chain integrity, and customer trust. Moving to acquisition benefits. November 20 marked the one-year point of our acquisition of IT Savvy, and we have been thrilled with the progress to date. Cross-sell performance remains strong, and we are now going to market under a unified brand Xerox IT Solutions. The alignment and scale provide us opportunities to deliver unique value to our 200,000 customers. Such as with the recent launch of Xerox Tri Shield 360 cyber solution. A holistic cybersecurity offering targeted specifically for SMB. The solution is built upon Palo Alto Networks advanced detection technology, continuous monitoring, and response platform. With cyber response provided by Lumify and its security operations center and cyber insurance coverage provided by the Hartford brokered by Aon. This is enterprise-grade security designed for SMBs offering scalable protection without the complexity or the cost of traditional solutions. While operational efficiencies are a main pillar of the rationale for the Lexmark transaction, we are beginning to bear fruit as one company in our go-to-market operations. In the fall, we rolled out Lexmont produced a three devices in Eastern Europe. The channel reaction so far has been very positive as this product has better features and design innovation focused on serviceability, and reliability. We expect these devices to reduce service costs, extend activities in post-sales, and lead to better uptake with partners over time. We are planning a larger global rollout in 2026 as our in-house manufacturing capacity ramps. During the quarter, Xerox and Lexmark secured a global first joint win with Morrisons. One of The UK's leading grocery retailers. The agreement expands a long-standing relationship with Morrison's and positions Xerox as a strategic partner across both operational print infrastructure and customer marketing communications. The solutions have Xerox providing a fully refreshed central print room, leveraging cloud-based print management, web-to-print automation, and Lexmark MPS for their entire state 500 supermarkets 15 logistics sites, the head office, and with added Xerox on-site operations. Morrisons will also adopt our GoInspire platform including direct mail, loyalty communications, store leaflets, and campaign automation through GoInspire's digital marketing platform Go 360, enabling more targeted data-driven customer engagement. Earlier this month, I joined our team at the National Retail Federation show in New York City where, for the first time together, we demonstrated legacy Xerox strength in IT solutions production print, and digital workplace with Lexmark's expertise in in-store operation with devices intentionally engineered for retail. Signage solution, and Vision AI. We were excited by the reception and believe our enhanced value proposition, especially with the retail vertical, will lead to greater participation in RFPs and further wins and expansion into existing accounts. We also just announced the partnership agreement with RJ Young, one of the largest office equipment and technology dealers in The United States. This agreement, which stems from the existing Lexmark partnership, extends Xerox portfolio with RJ Young's proven service capabilities to their customer base. We continue to look for opportunities as one company to commit to and invest in our partners. Finally, balance sheet strength. For those focused on our current credit ratings, we remain extremely confident in our ability to drive increased profitability and delever. Since the Lexmont transaction closed, we have generated meaningful positive free cash flow and took net debt down by $366 million. For the near and medium term, we plan to use all excess free cash flow to repay debt in connection yesterday's announcement of the warrant distribution, which Chuck will speak to in more detail, further supports our goal to enable balance sheet flexibility. Cost rationalization remains a top priority, and we are reaffirming our cumulative run rate gross cost synergy targets of at least $300 million from the Lexmont acquisition and the $1 billion plus of profit improvement as part of our reinvention program. Inclusive of Lexmark cost synergies. Delivery against this target is centrally managed and continuously updated through our enterprise transformation office or ETO a joint team comprised of legacy Xerox and Lexmark leaders. The ETL is responsible for enabling our reinvention priorities overseeing integration execution, and building adorable transformation capabilities across the enterprise through robust analytics and disciplined governance. This includes active oversight of several core integration work streams, dozens of sub work streams, and hundreds of enterprise-wide initiatives. Each initiative is formally documented tracked through defined stage gates, and subject to required milestones and approval before being incorporated into our integration and synergy forecast. This level of rigor and transparency gives us strong confidence in our ability to deliver on and potentially exceed our synergy commitments. Before I hand the call over to our recently appointed chief financial officer, Chuck Butler, I wanted to share why he is the ideal leader for this role. Chuck joined Xerox as part of the Lexmark acquisition where he spent twenty-one years in a variety of senior leadership positions most recently as their chief financial officer. He brings deep experience and proven resilience having led the company through supply chain disruption, a significant manufacturer transition due to US sanctions, on its former Chinese parent company, and a large-scale restructuring that delivered stronger revenue and profitability. At this pivotal moment for our organization, Chuck's thoughtful, pragmatic approach to driving operational excellence and profitability is just what we need. I'm excited to partner with him as we work to restore growth, and strengthen the business. Chuck, take it away. Thanks, Steve. It's an honor to step into the CFO role at this moment in the company's history. I don't take this responsibility lightly. Spent the last couple of months getting up to speed, and while there's work to do, I'm encouraged by the talent across the company and the early signs of progress from My priorities are straightforward. Improve execution, strengthen the balance sheet, and drive predictable profitability and cash generation. Let me start with the quarter. For Q4, while revenue was slightly below guidance, adjusted operating income and free cash flow came in ahead of our expectations. We saw contributions from integration activities, early synergy capture, and disciplined cost actions. On a reported basis, Q4 revenue increased approximately 26% year over year driven by the contributions from Lexmark and 9%. Adjusting for deliberate exits, nonstrategic reductions, and normalizing backlog fluctuations, revenue declined about 5% This is consistent with Q3 and reflects ongoing macro and policy-related uncertainty particularly early in the quarter. Results this quarter were affected by unforeseen impacts, primarily from the sale of finance receivables in Portugal and France. These transactions reduced revenue by $16 million and adjusted operating income by $13 million. But were executed to strengthen the balance sheet, mitigate risk, and improve liquidity. Without this effect, revenue would have been roughly in line with expectations and adjusted operating income would have been well above guidance. Turning to profitability. Adjusted gross margin was 29.3%, down two thirty basis points year over year reflecting 160 basis points of higher tariff cost and 160 basis points of increased product cost partially offset by Lexmark's contribution and reinvention benefits. Adjusted operating margin was 5%, down 140 basis points driven primarily by lower gross margin, partially offset by integration savings, including headcount actions, executed in October and early nonheadcount synergies. Adjusted other expenses net was $85 million up $54 million year over year due mainly to higher net interest expense associated with the Lexmark acquisition financing. The adjusted tax rate was 147.1%, compared to 32.9% last year, reflecting geographic mix of earnings and an inability to benefit from current year losses and expenses in certain jurisdictions. GAAP loss per share was 60¢, down 40¢ year over year and adjusted loss per share was 10¢, 46¢ lower primarily due to higher interest expense. Let me now review segment results. Within print and other, Q4 equipment revenue was $485 million up 23% as reported, or up 21% in constant currency. On a pro forma basis, equipment revenue declined approximately 10% normalizing for reinvention-related actions and other onetime items. Equipment revenue declined around 5%. To provide additional context, legacy Xerox equipment revenue declined 14% in constant currency, or roughly 10% excluding reinvention-related items tied to our decision to discontinue manufacturing high-end production systems. This compares to a normalized 8% decline in Q3. Sequential performance was impacted by continued budget-related delays, in federal and sled orders as well as softer commercial and channel demand. Lexmark equipment declined 8% in constant currency, including an estimated 12 points of year over year backlog fluctuations, underlying demand grew 4% versus a comparable 12% decline in Q3 indicating a firming of demand over the quarter. Elevated backlog weighed on Q4 revenue but represents a future revenue opportunity as it converts. Print post-sale revenue was $1.39 billion up 25% as reported and up 23% in constant currency.