VIRC Stock Near $6: Why the Memorial Day Reopen Matters Now

May 24, 2026
VIRC Stock Near $6: Why the Memorial Day Reopen Matters Now

New York, May 24, 2026, 14:05 EDT

Virco Manufacturing Corp. shares ended the week at $5.98, leaving the Nasdaq-listed school-furniture maker slightly lower over five sessions and down 2.0% on Friday before the U.S. holiday break. The stock’s market value was about $94 million at the latest quote.

The timing matters now. Nasdaq’s holiday calendar shows U.S. equity trading closed on Monday, May 25, for Memorial Day, so VIRC will not get another regular session until Tuesday.

That pause lands in a thinly traded micro-cap, meaning a small market-value company where a few orders can move the price. Friday volume was 22,451 shares, StockAnalysis data showed, after Thursday’s bounce to $6.10 faded into the close.

For the week, VIRC slipped about 0.8%, from $6.03 on May 15 to $5.98 on May 22. The move was not large, but the tape was uneven: down early, up hard Thursday, lower again Friday.

The recent corporate story remains the April annual results. Virco reported fiscal 2026 net income of $2.6 million on revenue of $199.7 million, down from $21.6 million and $266.2 million a year earlier, as COVID-era school furniture demand and backlog effects unwound.

Investors have a more immediate operating yardstick: summer orders. Virco said on April 8 that its “shipments plus backlog” measure — actual shipments plus orders expected to ship later — was about 3% below the prior year, while incoming order rates were running ahead by a low-double-digit percentage; the company also warned not to treat those measures as forecasts. SEC

Chairman and Chief Executive Robert Virtue called the year a “practical stress test” and said management looked for “improved results” as school functions normalize. The quote gives shareholders something to measure against as the June-to-August delivery season starts.

Seasonality is central here. Virco said in its annual report that it historically ships about half of annual revenue in June, July and August, and that peak weeks can run far above winter levels, making working-capital planning and on-time delivery unusually important for the next stretch.

The competitive setup is not soft. Virco’s annual report named KI, Steelcase/Smith System and HON among manufacturers it competes with in educational furniture, a market it described as bid-driven and price competitive.

But the downside case is plain enough: tariffs, freight, steel and plastics costs could pressure margins if Virco cannot pass them through, and a bad seasonal forecast could leave it short of product or carrying too much inventory. The company also flagged school-budget weakness and price competition as risks to sales and profit.

The week ahead is therefore less about one headline than the Tuesday reopen. The next dated corporate event is the annual meeting on June 16 at Virco’s Torrance, California headquarters, where shareholders are due to vote on directors, pay and auditor matters.

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