NEW YORK, March 5, 2026, 06:14 EST
- CXApp reported that at one major enterprise tech client, a significant portion of reserved desks ended up sitting empty, according to its workplace analytics.
- The stock jumped roughly 10% ahead of the U.S. open.
- Just days out from a Nasdaq deadline over the stock’s sub-$1 bid price, the update lands.
CXApp Inc shares jumped roughly 10% ahead of Thursday’s U.S. session, with the move coming as the company pointed to workplace analytics results tied to a significant enterprise tech customer. At $0.20, the stock puts the software provider’s market cap near $17 million. Nasdaq
The update arrives while employers grapple with hybrid schedules. Office space isn’t cheap, and misjudging needs can stick companies with vacant floors. No wonder interest is up in tools for tracking desk reservations and how space actually gets used.
CXApp, which is listed on Nasdaq as CXAI and CXAIW for its shares and warrants, faces pressure from a ticking listing deadline. According to a regulatory filing, Nasdaq has given the company until March 10, 2026 to bring its share price back above the $1 mark for a minimum of 10 consecutive trading sessions. If CXApp can’t clear that bar, it could get an extra 180 days to comply before delisting becomes a real risk.
CXApp’s CXAI VU Analytics platform tracked over 100,000 desk bookings across a multi-site corporate workforce, the company said, with users logging more than 35,000 app sessions and around 1,800 kiosk sessions. Roughly 19% of those bookings were auto-released due to no-shows, and another 15% ended up canceled. Actual desk occupancy came in at an average of 66%, according to the data, though some departments were seeing no-show rates above 75% late in the week. CEO Khurram Sheikh described the trend as “measurable economic leakage” from space that gets booked but never used. ACCESS Newswire
CXApp claims its platform applies behavioral modeling and anomaly detection tech to flag bookings that might be at risk. Executives also get access to “natural language” analytics, so they can type out questions in plain English, plus a “transparent” analytics layer that lays out exactly how the results come together. The Palo Alto, California-based company is calling this expanded offering “agentic AI,” pitching the software as more than a Q&A tool—CXApp says it’s designed to actually launch actions and workflows based on data signals. cxapp.com
The company is working on predictive tools—think forecasting, plus signals to flag potential no-shows. It’s pitching this as a move away from just reporting what happened, toward interventions: tightening policies or shifting capacity before problems crop up.
Competition is stiff in workplace booking and utilization software, as major players load these features into bigger enterprise packages. ServiceNow targets workplace services and reservations through its workplace service delivery tools, and Microsoft’s Places brings in desk booking along with occupancy and space utilization metrics. ServiceNow
Even so, translating utilization stats into real savings isn’t always straightforward. These systems rely on employees actually showing up, while managers need both the power and the will to shut down floors or rethink routines when the data turns sour.
CXApp hasn’t disclosed the enterprise client or specified how much could be saved, so investors are left to guess the revenue implications. The board already has the green light from shareholders for a reverse stock split—anywhere from 1-for-5 to 1-for-10, according to a separate filing—in an effort to keep the company’s shares trading on the Nasdaq. SEC