Sydney, June 10, 2026, 00:18 AEST
- Xero finished Tuesday 1.07% lower at A$78.42 after trading resumed following Monday’s King’s Birthday holiday on the ASX.
- The S&P/ASX 200 finished down 0.24% at 8,604.20, coming off early lows.
- Xero has climbed 4.32% in the past week, though shares are still down 30.4% for 2026.
Xero Ltd shares slipped on Tuesday, giving up ground after the King’s Birthday holiday. The cloud-accounting group traded lower as investors pulled back from Australian tech stocks that had run up lately.
XRO shares closed at A$78.42, off 85 cents, or 1.07%, as of 4:10 p.m. in Sydney. The stock started at A$78.13, touched a low of A$76.50 and a high of A$79.23. Trading volume came in at 781,300 shares.
ASX cash market stays shut on Monday for the King’s Birthday holiday. Trading comes back Tuesday but the broader market can’t hang on to early gains. The S&P/ASX 200 dropped 20.9 points to finish at 8,604.20, clawing back from a steep fall after the open.
Xero kept up gains over the week but still lags for the year. Shares were up 4.32% in seven days, Intelligent Investor data showed. But the stock is off 30.4% in 2026 and down 56.4% for the financial year to date, with the May earnings reset still on investors’ minds.
Xero’s numbers are still moving the stock. FY26 operating revenue came in at NZ$2.753 billion, 31% higher. The company posted adjusted EBITDA at NZ$757.4 million, up 18%. Adjusted EBITDA cuts out some items from normal earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortisation. Net profit after tax dropped 27% to NZ$167.4 million. Operating income slid 13%.
Chief Executive Sukhinder Singh Cassidy called out “disciplined execution and macro-resilience” as she discussed the results. Singh Cassidy pointed to faster U.S. growth and new Melio direct-payments customers. The board cleared up to A$550 million for share purchases to offset dilution tied to staff share awards.
The U.S. is still the key swing for Xero. Xero said last year it would buy Melio, a U.S. payments firm, for $2.5 billion. The goal: get payments tools into its accounting software and grow in North America. At the time, RBC Capital Markets analyst Garry Sherriff pointed to “much to like” in the bigger U.S. footprint. But E&P’s Paul Mason said the price “looks pretty full” unless Xero can deliver synergies. Reuters
Xero is stepping into the U.S. small-business software mix, where Intuit’s QuickBooks has a line-up for invoicing, expenses and cash flow. Xero is pitching investors a bigger platform: accounting, payroll, payments, plus AI-backed workflow automation.
ASX-listed software stocks traded unevenly. WiseTech Global dropped 4.55% to A$38.00. TechnologyOne was up 0.71%, Life360 added 1.64%. The moves point to patchy action in the group, not a straight-line session on Tuesday.
Xero’s still on a price-to-earnings ratio of 93.75, which is high for a software name. That leaves the stock exposed if profit disappoints—whether that’s from higher U.S. rates, software sector resets, or the costs of rolling out the Melio integration. If revenue growth slows or the push into U.S. payments drags, investors may keep marking down growth stocks like Xero.
Xero doesn’t have a near-term set event that would bring fresh news for investors. Its next scheduled annual meeting is Aug. 27, and FY27 half-year numbers are set for Nov. 12, according to the company’s investor calendar. That leaves the shares moving with the broader tech trade and what traders think of the U.S. strategy right now.